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                  <text>I

Cleveland man
~ghting Sony over Meat
Loafs music, A6

Buc}&lt;.eyes shock

unbeaten Dlinois, Bt

~ PONTIAC
~, Fuel

for the Soul .

"Since 1930" ·
Middleport • Pometoy, Ohio
;;o (I:\ IS • \ ol. ;;.+ . :\o. 1:1 &lt;1

2005
CHEVROLET

• Eagles lace tough test
with Alricentric.
See Page 81

SEDAN

$18 275*

.

.

From the mid~sized Colorado to the Silverado HD
Dura max Diesel - 2 and 4 WD, Regular &amp; Ext Cab ·
OBITUARIES ,

UPTO

$3,500** CASH ·BACK

Page AS
• John Allen Hudson
• Mary ~illian Starcher

OR

" "" ,,.,d.HI ·"

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAI LYS ENTINEL.COM

failed in the Senate.
The organization's ·efforts
have been underway since
POM.EROY - U.S . Rep. 1989, when the U.S.
Ted Strickland, D-Lisbon, Supreme Court upheld a
was honored in a Pomeroy Texas man's rights to burn
ceremony Friday for hi s the tlag under the First
efforts to protect the Amendment to the U.S .
American Flag.
Constitution. Now,. the gro up
worki·ng' . · for
a
Members 'of local veterans is
organizations and local elect- Consti'tutional Amendment
ed officials attended · the making such acts illegal.
award presentation, held at . Thi s is the fourth tiine
the .
Meigs
. County such an .award has been presented to Strickland . for hi s·
Courthouse.
Frank
Vaughan · of support of the propo sed
Pomeroy 's Drew Webster amendment.
Post 39, American Legion,
"Desecrating the tlag of
represented the Citizens our nation dishonors the
Flag Alliance in presenting memory of those who died
Strickland with a certificate defending it," Vaughan said.
of appreciation and a gift in "Regardless of ~olitical affilhonor of hi s consistent sup- iation , we in the commun ity
port of. federal legislation should support Congressman
which would criminali ze Strickland in his efforts to
desecration, including burn- protect our flag ."
in g, of the American Flag.
The Coalition has also supThe proposed .l aw has ported keeping the words .
al ways passed th e U.S. · "One Nation Under God" in
House -with Strickland's the Pledge to the American
support - but has always Flag . .

.

Using·scrapbooking to.preserve memories

INSIDE .
• Drug-coateq stents
help many avoid heart
bypass surgery, studies
show. See Page A5

_
_
..
_... ......

2005

...........
_____
,...... ,... ....,__.,.
...............
IIIII

CHEVROLET

I 1111111 . . 1

.._

MALIBU

FE

.,..._.,

SEDAN

SWdiw; At
'

WEATHER

CEimfffiD

Beth Sergentf photo

2004 OLDS
ALERO

2004 CHEVY

· • Silver • 4 Door
• Cloth • .CD

• Sport Red • 4 Door
· • Cloth

2004

CAVALIER LS

Pomeroy's newest downtown business is Makin' Memones on the River. a scrapbook store..
located at the corner of West Main and Court. The store offers a wide variety of scrapbooking
suppl ies for people of all ages. Pictured from the left .are Lindsey Hysell, Amy Hysell, and owner
Debbie Hysell.
·

IMPALA

'2004GRAND
AM SEDAN

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH .
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

200.3 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX

• Red • 6 Cyl• Auto
•CD•Cioth

• Silver
• Low Miles • Cloth

·2004 CHEVY

2002
YeNTURfVAN

200.3 BUICK
RENDEZVOUS

BLAZER

• Lt. Driftwood
• Leather • AWD
• Towing

• 4 Door • Sandlewood
·• Cloth • Low Miles

• Power Sliding Doors
• Blue • OnStar

2002 "
SILVERADO

EXT CAB

• Green/Pewter •Z71
• 4WD • Low Miles

POMEROY
Scrapbooking is more than
just gluin g a picture onto a
piece of paper, it' s become a
business for some , including
Debbie Hyse ll who last .week
opened a store in downtown
Pomeroy.
Hyse ll who li ve' 111
Rutland is the owner of
Makin ' Memorie s on the
Ri ver Scrapbook Store locat ed at the corn er of West Main
and Court Streets.
''I thought it might be
fun ," Hyse ll 'aid about her
. decision to turn a hobby of
scrapbooking into a business.
"It's a fun way to share
memori es:· Hysel l' s employee and niece Amy Hysell
said.
In fact scrapbooking is
becoming a soc ial· event
where friends and family
gathel' io sort their pictures
and
mementos .
These

mementos may include
movie and . concert ticket
stubs ,
graduatio n
and ·
anniversary announcements
and 'children's artwork .
The photos arid mementos
are , then accessorized with
embellishments like labels,
buttons, stickers, .frames and
license plates th at· coi ncide
\Vith the page as does a jour. nal entry that is written for
prosperity.
Debbie said . she · wished
her mother would have done
scrapbooki ng with her old
photos . In fact. most people
have a box of old phqtos full
of people they don't kilow
from another ge neration.
Scrapbooking is a way of
documentiJlg the past for
fut ure generations .
Amy said that you don't
have to be artistic to scrapbook and Debbie recommends that you scrapbook .
·pictures as you get them

INDEX

·2004TON
EXPRESS VAN

200.3
AVALANCHE

· •White
• 15 Passenger Seating

• White • Cloth
• Low Miles • Z71

Calendars

I
I

.

A:3.

Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials ·
Obituaries
Sports

Weather

B Section
A6

© 2005 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

RACINE
Meigs
County's annual Health Fest
to be held Satu'rday at the
Southern Elementary School
will focus on developing an
awareness of the importance
of nutrition education, wellness, positive self-esteem. tit·
ness and healthy li ving.
"This is a time for the celebration of health," said chairman Junie Maynard, R.N .•
B.S.N.. Southern Local's
school nurse , noting that
something for every age will
be offered during the Fest's
10 a.m. to 2 p.m . hours.
"Everything is free and the
public· is invited," she said.

There will be non-fasting State Hi ghway Patrol and
cholesterol and blood glucose Louie the Lightening Bu g
testing offered by the.Holzer from American Electric
Medical Center. weight and Power.
body mass measurements and
The morning program will
blood press ures by the Meigs ki ckoff with a program of
County Health Department. health .and exerc ise SOf\gs by
and s1ress sc reening by . the first graders. Emcee for
Woodland Centers. A vari- the day · wi ll be Rockin '
ety of literature'on everything Reggie Robinson of Health
fro m tobacco use to sleep di s- Recovery conducting games
orders, to the kinship pro- like hula hoop and limbo as
gram handled through the well as karaoke.
Meigs County Counci l on
Displays will include
Aging. to all sorts of health books from the public library.
issues many specific to this Ohio University\ College of
area will be offered .
Osteopathy will be there with
There to meet and greet the well ness information. and
children wi ll be Ronald there will be booth on safety
McDonald who will also be issues by the Ohio State
presenting a show at I p.m.. Hi ghway Patrol. Several
Teddy the Trooper from the other agenci~ s will be having

.

•

ANALYZES.

700 East Main Street ,

'DECIDES~

'

·~ 1nc1u1tt ..he.. 'Ill!. t111t llld ._ __.. on~......_ c.11t loCk ........ pol modo~ I i ..ldintjol illllll&lt;ll- . . . . . lppiWII"""'
~

GMAC..,.. ........

.

.

A tevolutionary breakthrough
.in digital,btAring techpoiOgy•

'

.

~

1 - h/ .,_ .

June Maynard . Southern Elementary health nurse, center, meets
with Kyle Ord and Brenda Curfman. of the Meigs County TObacco
Prevention Coalition to complete plans for the countywide health
fest to oe held Saturday at Southern Elementary School.
exhibil&lt;and distributing liter- · donated by local businesses
ature on their programs.
Numerou' door prizes
Ple•se see Helllth, A5

'

Jackson, Ohio
(740) 286-21 '(1
1-8()0... 700..;5150·

Pltase see SallpitiNILiii&amp;OAS

Health Fest focuses on wellness
2 SEC;IlONS- 12 PAGES

• Blue • Automatic
•CD•Crulse
• Keyless Entry

Brlan J. Reed/ photo

Fran k Vaughan of Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion, presented U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland
with ·an award fo r his support of legislat ion protecting the American Flag. Also pictured are
Strickland Field Representative Christy Lynch. De l Pul li ns. bail iff of Meigs County Court, Vernon
Harrison of Legion Post 602 ,- Racine, Robert Holland of Feeney-Bennett Post 128, Middlepo'rt,
County Recorder Kay Hill , Aud itor Nancy Parker Grueser, Pomeroy Mayor John Musser and
Treasurer Howard Frank.
·

BY BETH SERGENT.
BSERGENT@M YDAILYSENTINEL.COM

0°/o FOR 60 MONTHS

"'""I,.,,

Strickland honored for protecl ing U.S. Flag·

SPORTS

IMPALA

\10:\'11 \) . \L\1{(11-. :.!OO,"i

.

�I

PageA2

COMMUNfl'Y

The Daily Sentinel_

Monday, March 7,

2005

Public meetings
. Band
POMERoY
·
Boosters

-. Meigsd
w1ll meet at
6:30 p.m. in the band room
at the · high school. Band
parents
encouraged
to
attend.
·
. Racine
. RACINE
Chapter 134, OES will meet
at 7:30 p.m at the hall.
Mock initiation with all
officers asked to attend.
Refreshments.

. POMEROY - "Tell Tales: A Triple
The plays will be presented at 7:30
Play" ·will be presented by the senior p.m. in the school gymnasium. _ The
class at Meigs High School Friday.
They are "Mike's ,Case", "Murder is cost is $4 for adults and $2 for students
Fun" and "How Opes a Thing Like with all tickets being sold at the door.
That Get Started," a11 comedies.
Celia McCoy is the director.

•

Eric Cullums. center, has a leading role in "Murder is Fun." Others m the play ·are left to right,
front, Katie Reed, Chet Wigal, Emily Ashley, Cas.sie Lee, Megan Garnes : and back, Rosanna
Dillard, Eddie Fife, Zack Dunham, Grant Arnold , Adam Snowden, Pat Dowell, Renee Bailey,,and
Brittany Cremeans.

Monday,_March 7
LETART - The Letart
Township Trustees will meet
at noon at the office buildmg.
Racine
RACINE
Village Council will meet at
7 p.m. at the municipal
building,
SYRACUSE Sutton
Township Trustees will meet
Tuesday, March · 8
at 7 p.m. at Syracuse vilPOMEROY - The Meigs
lage hall.
County
Chamber
of .
Commerce will meet at 12
Tuesday, March 8
p.m. at the Wildhorse Cafe
POMEROY - The Meigs for their "Business Minded"
County Board of Elections luncheon. Speaker · Fran
will meet at 8:30 a.m. at Tiberzio
from
Ohio
the office in the courthouse Chautauqua and unveiling
annex.
.
of " 2005 Visitors Guide."
POM~ROY Bedford
POMEROY - The Meigs
Townshtp Trustees Will meet :County . Genealogy Society
at 7 p.m. at the town hall.
will meet at 5 · p.m at the
Meigs Museum.
Wednesday, March 9
POMEROY - The Meigs
Thursday, March 10
County Board of ' Health
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
meeting will take place at 5 Masters- will meet at noon
p.m.
in the conference · at St. Paul Lutheran Church
room of the Meigs County for a salad potluck lunHealth Department, 11 2 E. cheon.
Memorial Drive in Pomeroy.

Clubs and .·
organizations.
Monday, March 7
GALLIPOLIS · - . Holzer
Center for Comprehensive
Weight Loss Informational
meeting 5:30 to 6:30 p.m .
in Holzer Medical Center
-Education and Conference
Center, Room C. · Weight
Loss Support Group will
meet from 6:30 to 7:30 pm.
in the Center, Room AB.
For more informatiorj call
446-5825.

Roles in "Mike's Case" are taken by Ross Well, center; and left to right, front, JLJstine Dowler,
Ashley Baylor, Kim Reynolds, Natasha Wise, Brooke Venoy, Seirra Jackson, Lisa Gheen,
Elizabeth Well , and back, Carl Wolfe, Madison King, Aaron lhle. and Miguel Diaz.

.School News
Earns
scholarship
ASHLAND
- Andrea
Burdette, daughter of Robert
and Ruth Burdette of
Pomeroy, wiil be recognized
at the Ashland University
Endowed
Scholarship
Luncheon in ·April.
An an student, she has
received the Paul Barnes
Metzler Scholarship. · She is
one of more· than 500 stu-

dents rece1vmg scholarships Miami University in Oxford
donated by alun\ni and for the first semester. friends of the university.
Each year, interest earnings
from the scholarship endowment ·are awarded to students · who demonstrate
financial need and academic
MOREHEAD, Ky.
merit
Nick P. Weeks of Guysville,
. a Meigs. County native, has
been named to the dean's
li st at Morehead State
OXFORD
-Golden University for the fall quarFanning ' of Albany was ter, earning · a grade point
named to the dean's li st at .average between 3.5 and 4.0.

In the comedy " How Does A Thing Like That Get Started" roles are taken by, from the left.
Randy Hart, Trevor Depoy, Pat Dowell, Brandon Grover, Andrew Henderson, Zack Dunnam,
Jenna Wilt, Samantha Pierce, Katie Reed, lindsey Wh ite, and Jill Young.

On MSU
Dean's List

·someone
Feel
.
.

GS'-TRA SPECIAL.•

.On Dean's List

.

~&amp; ·a

.

Daily Sentinel

·Fast Forward enrollment still available
RIO
GRANDE
dents.
Designed
for
Interested adults can ·still working adults 23 years
enroll in the Fast Forward and older, the program
Program for the spring . feature's credit fo\ learnsemester at the University ing from life experiences
of Rio Grande/Rio Grande and conveniently schedCommunity College.
uled classes.
Fast
Forward
The next session of the. The
Portfolio Completion course Program recognizes that
begins Thur.sday, March 10. you have responsibilities
The· course ·meets eaeh of a family, spouse, parThursday evening from 6 ent, and career you
to 7:50 p.m. through April have a full life. Your life
28 in the Bob Evans Farms has provided you with
Hall on the Rio Grande vast learning experiences,
campus.
and these experiences can
Students can reserve a · enhance your college eduspot in this session by con- · cation. The Fast Forward
iacting Dale Whitt at (740) Program is designed to
· 245-7325 or (800) 282- look at your prior learning
7201, .exte(!Sion 7325.
from your personal life,
Rio
Grande's
Fast your work, your commuForward · Program is an nity .and civic involveaccelerated
academic ments, and your past eduprogram for adult stu - cational endeavors.

The
Fast
Forward
Program . begins with students enrolling in the
Portfolio
Completion
course. Students enrolled in
this course will learn how
to prepare a ·written portfolio to document learning
from life experiences.
Completed rortfolios will
be submitted for evaluation
of learning outcomes, and
students can earn up to 25
percent of the credit hours
required for a degree,
resulting in a possible substimtial savings of time and
money.
To register for ' the
course, or for more in formation about the Fast
Forward Program, contact
Dale Whitt at (740) 2457325 · or (800) 282-7201,
extension 7325.

.·_ Swimming lessons ·starting at Rio Grande
RIO GRANDE ·- Learn
to swim lessons will be
offered at the University of
Rio Grande during the
semester.
The
. spring
lessons, available to •students ages 3 and up,
include · a series of eight
30-minute·· sessions in the
University of Rio Grande
swimmin~ pool.
This first " senes of
lessons will begin on ·
Friday, March 11 and con- lessons. Students may
tiriue through Saturday, regis_ter to swim on
April 9. The lessons will Friday from 4:30 to 5
. be offered on Friday p.in . and Saturday from
evenings
and
Saturday II to II :30 a.m. or on
mornings, giving students Friday from 5 to 5:3.0
two lessons weekly for four p.m. and Saturday from
. weeks. All ...students register- · II :30 a.m. to noon.
ing for the course must be
Students may register for
potty-trained.
either of these sessions by
Two time blocks · are contacting
Dale
Whitt,
scheduled
for
these URG Ad1:1lt and Continuing

,.

Education at (800) 282720 I or (740) 245-7325,
Because of aquatic center
availability, there will be
no make-ups due to weather, holidays, or illness. If
the URG campus is clpsed,
that day's session also is
canceled. Additional lessons
will be offered, and more
information will be released
later:

Proud to be apart
of your life. .[

Subscribe IOday • 992-~ss·

•

GREETING!!.

Actual Size lx3
Run date Fri.,
March 25, 2005
Deadline Fri.
Ma.-ch 18, 2005

Evan &amp;. Adam Rodgers
Happy Easter
LOve, Mom &amp;. Dad

Mail to P.O. Box 729, Po~eroy, OH 45769
or drop off at The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.; Pomeroy, OH 45769
Child's Name_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __
From _____________________________________
Your Name _______________________________
Address ________________________________
Phone # ----------------'-----------------Ads Must Be Prepaid

.....

'.

_________

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..____~

_,__ ___

.--- ~.-

~-

.............

_,_,

--~-

.... - ·-.-.- .....

Ohioans
can get
free credit
reports

sued or filed bankruptcy.

The law now allows
Ohioans to get free copies
of their credit reports. An
amendment to the federal
Fair Credit Reporting Act
(FCRA), effective March I
requires each of the national consumer reporting companies to provide every
consumer with a free copy
of his or her credit. report,
upon request,- once every
12 months.
·
We are all aware of the
importance
of
credit
reports, since they contain
information about where
we live, . how we pay our
bills and whether or not
we. have been arrested,

2005 ·

address provided above .

Q.: How do 1 order my . Q.: What information
free credit report?
must I provide to get my
A;: There are currently free annual credit report?
three · national consumer
A.: You will need to
reporting companies, and provide
your
name,
they have Jointly set up a address, Social Security
central Web site, a toll-free number and date of birth .
phone number and a mail- If you haye moved within
ing address th(ough . which the past two years, you
you may order your free may have to provide _your
annual ~redit report}., To previous address. Also,
order, chck on www.annu- for security reasons, you
alcreditreort.co or call 1- may be asked for identi877-322-8228 or
fying information that
complete
an
Annual only you would know
Credit
Report
Request (like the amount of your
Form and mail it to: monthly mortgage payAnnual
Credit
Report ment). Each company may
Request Service, P.O.
ask you for different idenBox 105281, Atlanta, Ga. · tifying
information.
30348-5281. Do not con- Through
the
on-line
tact the three nationwide resource at www.annualreporting companies indi- creditreport.com,
you
vidually.
should get your report
They are only providing immediately.
If
you
free annual credit reports request your report via
to those who request phone or mail. you can
them through the Web expect to receive your
site, phone number or report within IS days .

Q.: How can l get add itional information about
free credit reports'!
A.: The Federal Trade
Commission (FTC) 1s a
good
so urce.
Visit
www.ftc .gov/crcdit 'ror further information.
Law Yt1&lt;1 Can Use is a
weeklv consumrr
legal
informarion column prm•ided as a public sen•ice of
the
Ohio
Sw re
Bar
A,-ociarion and · 1he Ohio
State Bar Fvundorion. This
article was prepared by
Jar
Seawn
r}f
the
Consumer
Credil
Counseling Service of the
Midwest. Arricies appearinx
in' rhis column are i111mded
lo pro·vide broad. lieneral
informarion ahnu/ !he lmr.
Before applying !his in{u(
marion · 10 · a specific legal
problem, readers are w xed
ro seek 1he advice of . a
licensed wromev.

Birthdays
Saturday, March .12
CHESTER
Wilma
Ginther Seaman, formerly of ·
Chester. will be 88 years
old on March I 2. Cards
may be sent to her at I 0720
State Route 550, Vincent,
Ohio 45784.
Sunday, M~;~rch 13
LONG
BOTTOM .
Henry Bahr will be 80 on
March 13, Cards may be
sent to him at 37837
Greenup
Lane,
Long
· Bottom, 45743 .

'''
•••

Wife saddled with dog duty
is ready to hand over leash
DEAR ABBY:
need
advice with a problem I
have regarding out basset
hound, "Sherlock." I bought
Sherlock for my husband,
" Ken," a year and a half
ago. Ken loves the dog. and
so does my 18-year-old
daug hter. "Gretta," who
lives with us.
When . I bought Sherlock,
the understanding was that
he would be cared for by
my husband imd daughter.
This is not what happened. I
do 90 percent of the feeding, cleaning up after him,
taking him to the · groomer.
the veterinarian, etc. We
also have a cocker spaniel,
"Lulu," we have had since
our Gre\ta was 3. Lulu has
alsG been my responsibility
for · the most part. Ken and
Grella play ·with the dogs,
and I "get" to do almost
everything else.
·
Abby, I am not · a dog
lover; I am a dog "Iiker." I
· feel used and resentfuL I
want to give Ken an ultimatum: Care for Sherlock or
find another home for him .
Am I being unreasonable ? I
feel guilty thinking about
doing this, because Sherlock
was a Christmas gift to my
husband, but I just don't
want to continue this way.
Ken works full time, as do
-~, but he commutes two
hours each day. Asking him
and Gretta to share in the
care of the dogs has done
no good. Any advice would
be appreciated. - USED
AND RESENTFUL IN
SOUTHERN CALIFORN IA
· DEAR
USED
AND
RESENTFUL: Stop feeling
used and resentful and look
in the mirror. Why did you
buy a second dog after seeing that your husband and
daughter didn't care for the
one you already had? You
put yourself in this pickle . .
Please reconsider shrugging off the responsibility
for Sherlock. There are
alternatives to getting rid of
him . A neighborhood teen
·could be hired to walk him .
A pet service could provide
transportation to the vet or
the groomer. Finding another home for him should be
· only your last ·resort.
Focus on the bright side.
Since you and your husband
have full-time jobs, and
your daughter is busy with
her own schedule, it's just
as well that you have two
dogs because they have
each other for compamonship.

Monday, March 7,

Law you can use

.Community Calendar

Senior plays to be presented

PageA3

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

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Dear
Abby

position in-between.

740.;446-0007
Toll Free 877-669-0007

·Specializing !n:
t/ Bankruptcy
t/ Divorce
t/ Charge Offs
t/ And MORE!!

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

PLEASANT
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MERCURY

304-67S-4340 II HotiRS4:46- 9800

f.AJcally owned. We care

·DEAR ABBY: Thirty
years ago my mother-in-law,
"Grace," suddenly changed.
She began accusing her husband of cheating on her and
trying to poison her. She
made his life miserable until
he passed away. After the
· funeral, we moved Grace
into ·a house next door to
ours.

Things were OK for a
while, then she started up
agai n. According to Grace,
everyone has been trying to
kill her. She has alienated ·
almost the entire f;1mily
because of her. accusations,
and she has called the
police several tirl)es because
she thinks everyone is steal- ·
ing from her.
A few . months ago, Grace
had s urg~ry. I stayed with
her until she was back on
her feet. Now she says I am
trying to poison . her, and
have people come . in and
steal her stuff when she's
outside.
My hu sband, her only
child, is very · upset and has
forbidden me to go over
there anymore. Grace is 83,
but age has nothing to do
with it. This started when
·she was in her early 50s.
Can somebody suggest
what we can do? We love
het dearly and we're at our
wits' end. - TEARFUL IN
l'ENNESSEE
DEAR TEARFUL: Your
mother-in-law needs a psychiatric evaluation. Her son
should make sure her doctor
understands what's been
going on before she goes
for the exam. The symptoms
you describe indicate she
may be mentally ill.
CONFIDENTIAL
TO
AFRAID TO FALL: Please
don't give up yet. Keep in
mind that every failure is a
stepping-stone to success.
Dear Abby is writ!ell by
Abigail Van Burell, also
known as )eanue Phillips,
and wa.1 founded by her
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Write
Dear
Abby
at
www.DearAbby.com or: P.O.
Box 69440, .Los A11ge/es,
CA 90069.

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Charlene Hoeflich
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Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
.of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
·the Government for a redress of grievances.

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-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution .

TODAY JN , HISTORY
Today is Monday, March 7, the 66th day of 2005. There are
299 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
Forty years ago,.on March 7, 1965, a march by civil rights
demonstrators was broken up in Selma, Ala., by state troopers
and a sheriff's posse.
On this date:
In 1849, horticulturist Luther Burbank was born in
Lancaster, Mass.
· In 1850, in a three-hour &gt;peec h to the U.S. Senate, Daniel
Webster endorsed the Compromise of 1850 as a means of preserving the Union.
·
In 1875, comroser Maurice Ravel was born in Cibourne,
France.
In 1876, Alexander Graham Bell recei ved a patent for his
telephone.
.
In 1911 , the United States sent 20,000 troops to the Mexican
border as a precaution in the wake of the Mexican Revolution.
In 1926, the first successful tran s- Atlantic radio-telephone
conversation.took place, between New York and London.
In 1936.._ Adolf Hitler ordered his troops to march irito the
Rhineland, thereby breaking the Treaty of Versailles and the
Locarno Pact.
In 1945, duting World War II, U.S. forces crossed the Rhine
River at Rernagen, Germany, usi ng .the damaged Ludendorff
Bridge.
In 1975, the Senate revised its filibuster rule, allowing 60
senators to limit debate in most cases, instead of the pre~i ­
ously required twd-thirds of senators present.
In 1981 , anti-government guerrillas in Colombia executed
kidnapped American Bible translator Chester Allen
Bitterman, whom they accused of being a CIA agent.
Ten years ago: New York Gov. George Pataki signed a death
penalty bill into law. In a near-party-line vote, the House
passed, 232-193, a business-backed measure designed to pressure parties in lawsuits to settle, their differences short of cost-.
ly trials.
Five years ago: Texas Gov. George W. Bush and Vice
President AI Gore were the big winners in Super Tuesday primaries. The Nasdaq composite crossed the 5,000 mark for the
first time before retreating . Country singer Fra~k "Pee Wee"
King died in Louisville, Ky. , at age 86.
One year ago: Fourteen Palestinians were killed in the deadliest Israeli raid in Gaza in 17 months. An investiture ceremony was held in Concord, N.H., for V. Gene Robinson, the
Episcopal Church's first openly gay bishop. Actor Paul
Winfield died·at age 62.
Today's Birthdays: Photographer Lord Snowdon is 75, TV
personality Willard.Scott Is 71. Auto racer Janet Guthrie is 67.
Actor Daniel J. Travanii is 65. Walt Disney Company chief
executive officer Michael Eisner is 63. Rock musiCian Chris
White (The Zombies) is 62. Actor John Heard is 59. Rock
singer Peter Wolf is 59. Rock musiciah Matthew. Fisher
(Procol Harum) is 59. Singer Peggy March is 57. Football
Hall-of-Farner Franco Harris is 55. Football Hall-of-Farner
Lynn Swann- is 53. R&amp;B singer-musician Ernie Isley (The
Isley Brothers) is 53. Actor Bryan Cranston is 49. Actress
Donna Murphy is 46.. Tennis Hall-of-Farner Ivan Lend! is 45.
Actor Bill Brochtrup is 42. Opera singer Denyce Graves is 41.
Comedian Wanda Sykes is 41 . Singer-actress Taylor Dayne is
40. Rock musician Randy Guss (Toad the Wet Sprocket) is 38.
Actor Peter Sarsgaard is 34. Actress Rachel Weisz is 34. Rock
singer Hugo Ferreira (Tantric) is 31. Actress Laura Prepon is
25.
Thought for Today: "The most dangerous qeation of any
society is that man who has nothing to lose." - James
Baldwin, American author ( 1924- 1987).

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OPINION

PageA4
Monday, March 7,

2005

Yesterday, classical musical lit the way
When Paul McCartney,
songs ter
of the
'60s
Revolution, ~ins one for the
zipper at the Super Bowl, it's
evidence, or, rather, confirmation of a sea change.
Diana
What was once a counterculWest
tural wave has subsided into
a gentle current of the main-.
stream. This week, with the
abrupt end of classical music
on
WETA-FM
(90.9), news and classical music
· Washington, D.C.'s public. have either totally cut the
radio station, I guess you Bach, or drastically red uced
could say a gentle current of it - no doubt, as in D.C., to
the mainstream has just plain · "steward'' public radio in the
subsided.
best possible way. It is true,
"It is painful, but my job is as public broadcasters point
to steward this public radio out, that the all-news audistation in the best possible ence is bigger than the part,
way," Daniel C.· DeVany, classical audience . But
WETA's vice president and should that factor be public ·
general manager, told The radio's decisive criterion?
Washington Times. This was
I don't think so. That is, I
a new one: The general man- · always thought · "public"
ager was making it sound as . radio - which, of course,
if it were in the public inter- receives "public" support est for public radio to "stew- was supposed to .do some:
ard" classical music right . thing more edifying than just
down the drain. Glug, glug. chase the almighty market
Airtime once filled with share . Otherwise, why the
timeless music ·will now "public" support? WETA' s
carry the day's events; decision may reflect a dwinwhich, of course, we in The . dling classical music audiPublic don't ever get enough ence, but what's more trouof.
·
bling is that it suggests our
· This format switcheroo is stewards of the airwaves no
not an isolated event. The longer consider classical
Times reports that the num- music worthy of their public
ber of all-classiCal public mission - or at least not as
radio stations in the nation worthy as an all-talk format.
has held steady at 42. Over
This is a cultural a]JOutthe past fiye years, however, face worth marking. Once
between 40 and 50 stations 'upon a time and long ago,
that once featured a mix of bringing classical music to

Monday, March 7,

www .mydailysentinel.com

2005

·Obituaries
Mary L Starcher

the airwaves was an image- between 1928 and 1942 that
enhancing operation, a pro- was heard by as many as 7
gramming decision, in the million children in some
words of music historian 70,000 schools every week
Russell Sanjek, to "win over - "children" who . likely
the custodians of public taste make up a sizable chunk of
and appease the Federal today's aging symphonyIC o m m u n i c a t i o n s going audience .
Commission." These days,
With the advent of televiit's bad taste even to mention sion, composer-conductor
pub I ic taste, and the FCC is Leonard Bernslein took up
appeased just by keeping a the educational baton, prowardrobe functioning. But in ducing 53 installments .of
the. pre-television era, .radio "Young People's Concerts."
networks didn't just spin As · one chronicler noted,
classical disks; they routine- howe v~r, "his 'young people'
ly featured live symphony have not musically inculcatorchestras - "partly for the ed their young." Nor have
sake of prestige, partly to they considered it important
convince th(! people· who to do so. MTV culture ·aside,
wanted radio to be more the fringe status of Bach,
educational that the radio Beethoven and Brahms
companies themselves were . shouldn't surprise a society
hot for culture," . as social that always chooses to teach,
historian Frederick Lewis say, recycling education
Allen put it.
over music appreciation.
The effect, Allen wrote, Sure, our kids will know
was unprecedeqted gains in how to dispose of old
the public's 'appreciation of records and COs, but they'll
classical music, the high- never know what's on them.
water of which probably After all, the less you hear,
came in 1937 ' when NBC the less. you hear. Call it
sent a represe ntative to decline, call it a trend - but
Milan, Italy, to invite Arturo don't call it stewardship .
Toscanini to lead a . new B.ecause what the classical
radio orchestra. And not just fade-out tells us more thari
any radio orchestra. As anything is that the "custodi- ·
mus1c historian Sanjek ans of public taste" have left
wrote,
NBC
''(raided) the building.
European and American
News, traffic and weather,
orchestras to obtain the best .anyone?
first-chair players." Another
(Diana West is a columnist
airwave institution was The for The Washington Times.
NBC Music Appreciation She can be contacted via
Hour, · a show produced . . dianawesr@verizon.net.)

Drug-coated stents help many avoid
heart bypass surgery, studies show

POMEROY - Mary Lillian Starcher, 85 of Starcher Road,
Pomeroy, died Saturday, March 5, 2004, at Mt. Carmel West
BY MARILYNN
Hospital in Columbus.
,
MARCHIONE
Born on Jan. '4, 1920, she was the daughter of the late John
AP
MEDICAL WRITER
and Grace Bumgardner Dill. She was a homemaker and volunteer. She was a member of the Ent\!rpl'ise United Methodist
ORLANDO, Fla . - A riew
Church, the Meigs County Senior Citizens, and the Meigs
generation 'of tiny metal sc~f­
County Cooperative Parish and the Comfort Club.
She is survived by two daughters, Mary (John) Herbert of folds that prop open artenes
Columbus and Linda Gheen of Delaware; a son, George R. has transformed heart care in
(Judith) Starcher of West Columbia, W. Va.; her special care- just a few years and is allowgiver and granddaughter, Laura Jean Hokes of Columbus; ing a growing number of peofour ~isters, Faye Watson of Reedsville, Kathryn Evans of ple to avoid having bypass
Pomeroy, Frances Carleton of Pomeroy, and Rella Arnett of surgery.
Mansfield; a ·brother, Willi am Dill of Mansfield; four sisters.
The devices, called drugin-law, Alta Dill of Reeds·ville, Barbara Dill , Betty Dill and coated stents. slowly release
Sarah Dill, all of Pomeroy, eight grandchildren, and 10 great- medication that prevents vesgrandchildren.
.
Besides her parents, she was prececjed in death by her .hus- sels from 1 reclogging after
band, George Starcher; brothers, Elsworth, Charles, Carl artd procedures to open them up.
At an American College of
John, a sister, Esther Dill , and a grancjdaughter, Cindy Curtis.
Cardiology
co nfereJlCC on
Graveside services will be held at l p.m. Tuesday, March 8,
.2005 at the Rocksprings Cemetery. In lieu· of flowers, dona- Sunday, doctors reported that
tions may be made to the Enterprise United Methodist both brands sold today are
Church, Pomeroy. There will be !JO calling hours . equally great at keeping blood
flowing smoothly, although
Arrangements were handled by Ewing Funeral Home.
one might be better for diabetics . Both were vastly better than the plain old me!al
ones that were standard ju st a
LEON W.VA.- John Allen Hudson, 90, of Leon , W.Va.
·
.
died on Saturday, March 5. 2005 at Pleasant Valley Nursing few years ago.
Benefits apparently last for
and Rehabilitation Center.
years,
and even very big
He is survived by his wi.fe, Rebec ca Hudson . .
Funeral services will be held at 3 p.m. Monday at the Good blockages in very small vesShepherd United Methodist Church in Point Pleasant. Rev. sels can be fixed thi s way.
Matthew Dotson and Rev. Justin Moran will officiate. There The devices work so well that
·will be no calling hours. In lieu of flowers memorial contrib- when an older stent clogs, it's
utoins may be made to the Good Shepherd Umted Methostt better to put a new drug-coatChurch. Arrangements were handled by the Anderson Funeral ed one inside it than to treat
Home, New Haven, W. Va. ·
the problem with radiation as
has been done in the past, one
·
study found.
Competitors also are being
developed that could help cut
the price of these devices.
One novel type even dissolves in the body once its job
is done.
POMEROY - .The Pomeroy Youth League will have their
"It's looking very good,"
baseball and softball sig~-ups for boys ages 5 through 17, and
girls ages 5 through IS on_Tuesday, March 8 and !!Jursday, Dr. Gerald Fletcher, a Mayo
March 10 at the Pomeroy F1re Dep~ment. The fee IS $20 per Clinic cardiologist, said of the
evidence for drug-coated
·
child and no more than $35 per fam1ly.
stents. "The benefit is going
to be substantial ip the long
·
variety of prices and invento- term ."
Clogged
arteries can cause
ry, including over 300 kinds
of paper. She has also a heart attack. One solution is
from Page A1
ordered custom embellish- op~n-heart bypass surgery, in
developed instead of letting menls such as banners and which blood vessels from
·e lsewhere in the body are
them pile up. ·
letters for schools in Meigs,
used to create detours around
Scrapbooking is becoming
blockages.
a unique gift given by moth- Mason and Gallia counties.
Makin' Memories on the
A less drastic treatment is
ers creating scrapbooks for
River
Scrapbook
Store
is
angioplasty, in which a tiny
their children, sisters creating
them for their siblings and open (rom 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., balloon is snaked through
grandmothers creating ·them .Monday through Friday and blood vessels to blockages
from 9 p.m. to 5 p.m. on and inflated to t1atten them.
for grandchildren.
Saturdays.
The phone num- Nearly a million of these are
Debbie thinks wha,t makes
done each year in the United
her store unique is the wide ber is 992-3919.
States, and in most cases, a
stent is placed to keep the
Holzer Medical Center,
artery from squeezing shut
Holzer Meigs Clinic, Meigs again.
County .Health Department,
But even these reclogged
from Page A1·
Farmers Bank , Bob Evans about one-fourth of the time
Farms, Subway, Hill's Citgo, until drug-coated ones came
will be given awarded and The o'aiiy Sentinel, Southern along and cut the rate to
.refreshments will be sold Local School District, Oh i'o around 5 percent. 'The first,
throughout the day by the · State University Extension Cypher, made by Cordis
family nutrition program, and Corp., a Johnson &amp; Johnson
. Southern Elementary P.T.o:
company, went on sale in
Sponsoring agencies are the Home National Bank.

.John Allen Hudson

Local Briefs

Pomeroy baseball sign-ups

Scrapbooking

How to cultivate male and female brains
It is one . of those controhigh sc hool, never gtvmg can't work 80-hour workversies that make you wonthem selves the chance to weeks and fly all over the
der how far feminism has
discover
that
their country to present papers at
. really come.
visual/spatial capabilities conferences. It's also about
Harvard
President
have caught up to the boys'. · male professors who tend to
Lawrence Summers recently
Many boys I imit themselves take male students under
Joan
suggest¢d that the difference .
to technical fields, unaware their wings to nurture and
Ryan
in men's and women's brains
that their verbal aptitude has guide. And it's about discould be one explanation for
improved by their mid-teens. crimination, too, conscious
the dearth of . women in
"H.igh school is the critical or unconscious . Studies
tenured positions i'n science
time for teaching science show that identical resumes
and engineering at the coun- the aptitude of men and and math 'to girls if we want are assessed differently
try's ·top universities. He has women. It's . all about the to attract more women into depending on whether the
apologized repeatedly 'ever aptitude of boys and girl~, the
fields, " name at the ·top is male or
science
since, though the drums con- she explained. ·The differ- · Brizendi~e said. "It's ctitical {emale.
tinue to beat for his removal. ences are real, and they are to keep girls from getting
But to move forward , we
Granted, Summers was the key to creating schools demoralized in junior high need to acknowledge , probably not the right guy to that will produce more and the first year or two of indeed , embrace - our dif.be tackling . the topic with female scientists. ,.
high school.' We need teach, ferences. How else will we
this particular crowd of . If you cracked open a ran- ers who have the ability and ever be able to reshape the
female academics, given his dom human skull, you . the knowledge to teach girls way we educate girls and
dismal record . of hiring couldn't tell if the brain mathematics and science thus change their futures?
women at Harvard. But real- ' inside was male or female . that best suits their style of
"This isn't about wanting
ly, how can any person who The difference is in the cir- learning."
female brains in the maths
has ever been married, or cuitry and the time line on
The same, of course, is true and sciences," Brizendine
who has ever raised a child, which it develops. Different for boys in the language arts. said. "It's about needing
deny .that men's and abilities emerge at different
Teachers and parents need them. One of the big issues
women's brains function dif- ages for boys and girls.
to reintroduce subject matter about globalization is we
Brizendine at various times during a need every piece of brain
feren.tly? Who among us · Girls,
hasn't wondered -during a explained, develop language child's development: some- power to · contribute to the
skirmish over the remote skills earlier than boy s do; thing that makes no sense intellectual output of this
control, say - whether our boys develop visual and spa· . this year, or even this 'semes- · country.''
.
paths might have diverged tial skills earlier than _girls. ter, might make perfect
The d·i fferences of the
..' somewhere along the evolu- By 2-1/2, many girls are serise the next. .
male &lt;jnd female brains are
actively choosing not to play
tionary process? ·
Brizendine say~ girls also what they are: biological
I
called
Louann with boys, not for any cul - would do better on the math facts devoid of social or
Brizendine, a psychiatry pro- tural or sociological reason portion of the SAT if the test political judgment. But what
fessor at UC San Francisco, but because boys have not had no time constraints. we do about -those differ-·
to get her perspective. She's a yet grasped the concept of Re search shows that boys ences is completely about
scientist at a top university verbal give-and-take.
· co nsistently register the social and political judgand knows first-hand that the
Boys, with. their faster- . highest scores on the ·math ment. We can ignore. the
number of women in tenured developing spatial skills, are portion of the SAT because research and cling to our idepositions in the sciences is more likely to gravitate to their brains process math ology that gender· equality
abysmally low. But she's also · building blocks and train problems
what the means gender sameness. Or
in the midst of writing about sets and physical activities researcher called "mental w.e can use the information
the differences between men that require minimal verbal rotation problems" .- faster to 'bring us closer to real
and women in a forthcoming interacti&lt;;m. ·
and more efficiently than equality, the kind that doesbook called "The Female
These cognitive gaps female brains. When the test n't mistake difference for
Brain."
between boys and girls close was untimed, the gender dis- inferiority, and one that valhigh · school , crepancy in SAT math scores ues all those striving toward
I wanted to know if she during
bought into the argument Brizendine said. Their brains disappeared.
the mountain top, no matter
that "intrinsic aptitude" catch up to each other. But
The dearth of women at their route or the speed by
Summers' phrase - keeps by high school, boys have the highest levels of math which they travel.
·
women out of the top tiers of · spent years reinforcing and and science is, yes, about an
(Joan Ryan is a rolwnnist
science and engineering. strengthening the ir skills in ossified academic culture for the San Francisco
Yes, she said, but not in the math and science, and girls that doesn't recognize that Chronicle. Sent) comments
simple way Summers sug- in language arts.
female professors don 't have to her in care of this newspagests.
Thus many · girls avoid wives to take care of the per or send her e-mail at ·
It has nothing to do with chemistry and calculu s in home and kids - and thus joan ryan@ sfcltronicle.com.)

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

Health

Drug-coated stents open possibilities
Tiny metal scaffolds that prop open arteries and are drug.coated
has transformed heart treatment Nearly nine out of 10 stents
· used in·the United States now are drug-coated.

Unblocking an artery with metal
~--

squeezing the
blood flow.

tube, is inserted
into the artery apd
expands the opening.

Inflammation

cim occur and

scar tissue can block the opening.
SOURCE: Food and Drug Administration

BY ANDREW
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

COLUMBUS - Proposals
to chan~e Ohio's tax system
have spill segments of the state
business community at a time
· of unprecedented· pressure to.
update the system.
Gov. Bob Taft's plan ·would
lower many Ohioan's income
taxes, slash the taxes paid by
businesses, then explllfd a new,
low business tax to more types
of companies. . . .
.
It also would ehmmate a tax
on companies' equipment _and
inventory. People on all stdes
of the debate agree that tax
needs to be go because it hurts
companies trying to expand.
· But that tax also provides
$1.8 billion for local government services each year,
hadn't
coUaborated
enough hewith
lawmakers
in
including schools. Th~ split in edging
the business comrnuruty anses 2003. This year, Taft and legover Taft's proposal to replace islative leaders are so far unanthat money with the new, low imous in backing a single plan.
tax of 0.26 percent compared to
Any tax proposal will always
8.5 percent.
.
include a list of winners and
Taft's plan is backed by man- losers, said David Adler, a corufacturers, farmers and the porate tax policy expert with
Ohio Business Roundtable, a Deloitte Tax LLP in Columbus.
group of chief executives of
' There's · probably member· large Ohio firms.
ship in each of the grpups that
It's opposed by the Ohio sees pros in each plan, there's
Chamber of Commerce and the probably membership in some
Ohio Council of Retai l of the groups that. see detriMerchants, who worry that . ments to the plan," Adler said.
companies with low profit mar.Taft downplays talk ofadivigins would be hurt smce the sion, pointing out through his
new tax would be applied to lieutt!nant governor that both
sides agree on about 85 percent
sales regardless of profits.
They want to modify the cur- of the plan.
But Lt. Gov. ·aruce Johnson
rent corporate tax and keep part

AP

Europe in 2002 ·and in !he stents two and three years
United States a year later. after treatment. Nearly nine
Boston Scientific Corp.'s out of. I 0 stents used jn the
Tax us stent was approved last United States now are dru gcoated, and two out of three
year.
They use radically different are Tax us stents.
Meanwhile, Medtronic Inc .
drugs, a.nd it hasn 't been known
which is better. On Sunday, reported that its experimental
results of the first large com- drug-coated stent, Endeavor,
parison study ;,hawed them to outperformed plain metal
stents in test s on . I , 197
be comparable.
It involved l ,3 53 patients in patients. The company hopes
Europe, Latin America and to sell it in Europe soon and
Asia. Rates of heart attacks, to seek U.S. approval later
strokes and repeat procedures this year.
Finally, the first human
were similar with both stents,
reported Dr. Marie-Claude tests of Biometrik' s experiof
lnstitut mental dissolving stent were
Morice
Cardiovasculaire Paris Sud in
France.
e.~ery
Cordis, -which sponsored
· the study, claimed Cypher
was safer because more blood
clots occurred with Tax us, but
. Morice said the study wasn't
.big enough or . designed to
answer that question.
"No
firm conclusions .
should be drawn" about safety; agreed Dr. ' Eberhard
Grube, who helped do the
study. ·
But another one led by doctors with no ties to Cordis
showed Cypher clearly outperformed Taxus in 250 diabetics, whose arteries are
more prone· to reclogging.
Problems were two to three
times more frequent among
those who got Taxus stents:
"These results would push
us to select the Cypher stent
for diabetic patients," said Dr.
Adnan Kastrati of Deutsches
Herzzentrum, a medical center in Munich, Germany.
Other research confirmed
the effectiveness of both

reported .
Five
people
received the device last July,
and ''absorption · seem s to
occur within the first four
weeks as planned," said Dr.
Raimund Erbel of University
Clinic in Essen, Germany.
Competition shou ld make
drug-coated stent s more
affordable , said Dr. Samin
Sharma, co-director of the
Cardiovascular Institute at
Mount Sinai Medical Center
in New York. They used to
cost more than $3,000, sell
for around $2,300 now, and
could drop · to less than
$2,000, he said.

Thursday in the Sentinel -

Coming

"Pfac~ f@ ~ f?

T/t!ngJ&gt; f@ JP@"

. Your guide to weekend
entertainment in the Tri-State

McClure's Restaurant

CeCe6rating Our
49tnJ2Lnniversary I
Monaay tliru Saturaay
Mardi 7tli tliru.Marcli 1~ 2005

Business groups split over proposal to change tax system
WEI.SIHtUGGINS

releases
medication that
prevents vessels
from reclogging.

A stent, wire

. PERSPECTIVE:
or all of a temporary penny ··shows little patience with _the
sales tax that expires in July.
chamber's · pos1tton, say mg
The effect the new tax would businesses always oppose tax
have is still being debated, and · plans that are successful in raisthe business groups that are . ing money.
. . .
· split over the proposal "are
The cham_ber ts qu tck to
retlecting some confusion on applaud _ Taft's _l\Oals. whtle
the part of their membership," keepmg 1ts oppos1tton ahve_and
said Edward Hill, a Cleveland pooh-poohing talk of a div1ded
State University economist.
bu.~i ne~s community. .
Taft proposed a different
We re JUSt respondmg to the
updating of Ohio's tax system concerns that have been
two years ago, but the propos~ · expressed by our members m
. was dead almost before his overwhelmmg consensus that
news conference announcing they w~ted to put f~:W~d this
the plan was over.
altem!lllve approach, swd Dan
Instead, lawmakers peeved Navin, the chamber's tax polithat they weren't consulted cy . director. "1 can't control
. enough enacted the temporary what people_P.Crceive."
sales tax increase and then tried
The Busmess Roundtable
'11nsuccessfully for _the next 18 say_s the mone_y lost by elimi. months to craft theu: own plan. natmg the equtpment tax must
. Taft, a Republican, learned be replaced, and the governor's
from his mistakes, acknowl- plan IS the responstble

A drug-coated
stent slowly

Plaque builds up,

approach.
·
"We stand up for what the
right thing is to do," said
President Richard Stoff.
"Members come and go- you
·have to stand up for what you
think is right."
·
Hill, of Cleveland State, said
in fTve years ·of working on
state tax policy )le's never seen
so many people united in their
belief that major change IS
needed.
But with that belief comes a
need, also unusual, for hard
evidence to back a position, he
said.
'This debate is not a fact-free
exercise any more," Hili said.
'There's an incredible burden
on anyone who wants to enter
this discussion, to enter· on the
basis of fact and not on the
basis of ideology."

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1. Hypertension
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2. Lipid or cholesterol abnormalities
3. Known coronary disease
4 _ Heart failure
5. Type II diabetes
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6. Peripheral/Carotid Artery Disease
7. On-site same day lab results
B. X-Ray services
Insurance's accepted : Most insurances accepted
IncludinR OH Medicaid

H~'rtino~&gt;r Pa~&lt;wAv.

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Luucb II: Dbmer Specials
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Medical Associates of Gallipolis
is now accepting a limited number of new .patients.
Practice is preventive cardiology.
The following patients would be covered:

I

,Buy Two combinations
1-32 on menu and
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Mexican Fried ice cream '
for only'

BUY ONE LUNCH PlATE
f-f3 'ANV GET SECONV

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�PageA6

OHIO
Cleveland man fighting Sony over .Meat Loaf's music

The Daily Sentinel

CLEVELAND (AP)- For
millions of music fans, Meat
LoaCs "Bat Out of Hell" is an
album full of melodramatic
anthems that take them back to
their youth.
For Steve Popovich, it's a
symbol of Sony BMG Music
Entertainment Inc.'s lack of
respect for the contributions
he made to their bottom line
and musical history.
lni998,Sonypaid$6.7million to Popovich and his former partners at Cleveland
International Records to settle
a lawsuit over royalties from
the album, which at more than
30 million copies is among the
best-selling records of all
time.
Popovich and Sony are set to
. meet again in court ne)lt month
to determipe if Sony failed to
. put the logo from his company
on millions of records that
should have carried the
Cleveland
International
stamp.
"I deeply resent the lack of
respect for hi_story," Popovich
told The (Cleveland) Plain
Dealer for Sunday's editions.
"I want something that my
grandkids can say, 'Yeah, my
grandfather did that.'"
Ac~;ording to court documents on the latest case, Sony
argues that Popovich, 62, is .
trying to milk more money out
of them by trumpin~;~ up the
logo agreement. Bestdes, the
company's lawyers contend,

Monday, March 7,

2005

Sony has started putting the are coming from." · •
logo where Popovich wanted
In the six years Popovich ran
it, so the matter should be Cleveland International, his
moot.
biggest lind was Meat Loaf.
Popovich got his start Popovich took the singer's
unloading trucks at a tape when others didn't want
Columbia Records warehouse it, and "Bat Out' of Hell" went
in Cleveland, the ci ty that platinum in a rush, selling [wo
years later would become mill ion copies in a year.
home to the Rock and Roll
Meat Loaf's follow-up
albums faltered, though, and
Hall of Fame and Museum.
By . the time he was 30, he Popovich struggled to find
was vice president for promo- another star. Cleveland
tiot:t at Columbia and helping International folded in 1982,
'make stars of Paul Simon and and Popovich went to work for
Bruce Springsteen, among Polygram
Records
in
others. Billboard Magazine Nashville, Tenn.
named him the industry's top
'Popovich and Meat Loaf
promotion executive for two grew· disgruntled with their
royalty payments. An auditor
years running.
.
Popovich became chief tal- hired by Popovich figured
ent scout at Epic;which, like they were owed about $20 milColumbia. was a CBS lion, so in 1995 Popovich suep
Records subsidiary. There he Sony, which had bought out
· .
helped land topflight acts such CBS..
as Michael Jackson. Boston ,
Meat Loaf sued Sony and
Ted Nugent and The Charlie Cleveland
International ,
claiming Popovich's company
Daniels Band.
In 1976, Popovich left to failed to collect the singer's
start
hi s
Cleveland money from Sony.
International label , taking
Sony settled with Meat
AP photo/Plain Dealer, Scott Shaw
with him an agreement with . Loaf, giving him and his songCBS: He would point out new writer up to $9 million and Steve Popovich. founder of Cleveland International Records, is photographed at Sokolowski's
acts to CBS, and if the compa- signing the singer to a new University Inn in Cleveland. In 1998, Sony BMG Music Entertainment Inc. paid $6.7 million to
ny opted to produce and mar- recording
contract
in Popovich and his former partners at Cleveland International Records to settle a lawsuit over
ket the music, it would do so exchange for Meat Loaf's tes- royalties from the album, which at more than 30 mi.! lion copies is among the best-selling ·
with Cleveland International 's timony against Popovich.
records of all time. Pqpovich and Sony are set to meet again in court in April, to determine if
logo.
Sony eventually settled with Sony failed to put the logo from his company on millions of records that should have carried
"Keep · yolir eye on . Popovich, too, and agreed to the Cleveland International stamp.
Cleveland," CBS wrote in start putting Cleveland
In 2002, Popovich sued logo agreement, costing him trial next month in Cleveland
an ad at the time, according International 's logo on reto court documents. "It's releases of "Bat Out of Hell" again, claiming Sony had millions.
before U.S. District Judge
The case is scheduled for Solomon Oliver Jr.
failed to live up its end of the
where the new breakouts and other albums.

Budget crunch could scuttle
Zanesville paddleboat
ZANESVILLE (AP) City and county officials are
searching for funds to save a
replica of an 1800s~era paddleboat that has ferried
tourists up and down the
Muskingurn River since
1976.
, It
costs . Muskingum
County about $100,000 a.
year to operate the Lorena
stern-wheeler, which brought
in only $60,000 in passenger
revenue last year.
'"We're talking with the
captain to see if he has any
suggestions on keeping the
· boat or reducing the ex pens- ,
es," said Brian Hill, a county
commissioner. "We want it to
stay here. It's an attraction.
People enjoy the trips up and
down the river."
Commissions, facing tough
spending decisions, have
already cut $4 ·million from

Visitors Bureau.
If the county doesn't keep
the Lorena, docked near
downtown Zanesville, commissioners hope the private
sector will take over.
· Capt. Jeff Hall has suggested that fund-raisers could
help keep the Lorena afloat.
· The
56-year-old
vessel
would celebrate its 30th
annivers~ry
on
the

Muskingum River next year.
"We're trying to preserve
the history of the community," said Hall, who has been
-the Lorena's · skipper for
seven years.
The boat operates from
May through October, carrying between 18,000 and
20,000 people each · season
on· lunch and dinner excursions and charter rides.

Rain and high water the
past couple of years have cut
into the schedule, including
five weeks that were washed
out last year.
Kevin Bishop, who rode
the boat as a child, hopes he
can share the experience with

his 6-year-old son, Chase.
"I' II definitely take him, if
they still have it running," he
said.
Inform~tion

from: The
Columbus
Dispatch;
l1ttp:l/www.di spatclr. com

NOTICE OF FIRST PUBLIC HEARING

The Meigs County Commissioners will hold the first of
two public hearings at the office of the Meigs County
Commissioners, Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio on March 17,'
2005 at I: IS P.M., for t!Je purpose of providing the public
information and receiving comments as to the Notice of
Availability of the 2005 CDBG CHIP program funds, a federally funded program administered by the State of Ohio,
CINCINNATI (AP) - A Munich, they were led to . Office of Community and Housing Partnerships.
The C:ommunity Housing Improvement Program provides
judge has ruled that 17 students believe the students would be
grant funding to qualified public agencies for improvement
from a suburban high school exposed to beer drinking
and provision of affordable housing for low to moderate
shouldn't have been suspend- because it is part of the
households and also for secondary/supportive activities. The
ed for drinking beer during a German culture. The legal
trip to Germany last March.
drinking age in Germany is 16. CHIP Grant. ceiling for each qualified public agency is
Hamilton County Common
"Knowing of the likelihood of $500,000. Eligible activities include: Downpayment/Rehab;
Pleas Judge Mark Schweikert suchex.posurewhileinGermany,. Owner Occupied r Rehab; Owner Rehab; Tenant Based
concluded this week that where this behavior is legal and
Rental Assistance; Public Rehabilltati"n; Fair Housing
Mariemont schoot" officials accepted, the (school) failed to
Activities; and Infrastructure activities. An additional
failed to clearly warn students adequately communicate to the
$50,000 in grant funding is available for Rental rehab; New
and parents that drinking alco- students or their parents its speHome Construction; New Rental Construction program if
hol during the school-spon- cific requirements regarding
the county includes such programs in the application:
sored trip would be punished. alcohol consumption and the
Citizens are encouraged to attend tliis meeting on March
Parents insisted that during a sanctions that would be applied,"
17, 2005, to make suggestions and comments ancrto provide
meeting before the trip to the judge said in his ruling. ,
public
input on various activities which may be undertaken
')
in this program. If a participant will need auxiliary aids (
interpreter, brailled or taped materials, assistive listening
device, other) due to a disability, please contact Gloria
Kloes, Clerk, prior to March 17, 2005, at 740-992-2895 in
order to ensure thai your needs will be accommodated. The
Meigs County Courthouse is handicapped accessible.
Written comments will be accepted untill:OO P.M., March
17, 2005 and may be mailed to the Meigs County
,Commissioners, Meigs County Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio
"5769.

Students win challenge to
suspensions for drinking

Tuesday, March 8
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
Expect a cloudy morning.
Temperatures will climb
from 26 to 32 )Jy late this
morning. Winds will be I0
MPH from the northwest.
· Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
It should continue to be
cloudy. We may see . a
snowflake
or
two.
Temperatures will linger at
32. Winds will be 10 to 15
MPH from the northwest.

•

Monday, March 7, 2005

Pre-sale tickets
available at EHS

Mick Davenport, President
Meigs County Commissioners

JOHNSON CITY, Tenn University of Rio Grande
senior Matt Boyles continued
his impressive performance
at the NAIA National Indoor
Track and Field Meet at the
Memorial Center, by finishing 3rd in the men 's 5,000meter run on Saturday.
Boyles qualified for the
finals with the fourth best
time qn Friday clocking in at
15:02.43.
The Tuppers Plains native
registered a time' of 14:54.86 .
in the finals placing behind
Corey Duquette and David
Cheromei
of
Virginia
Intermont. Cheromei was the
NAIA Champion with a time
of 14:37.01:
Boyles comes away with a
second national championship in the 3,000-meter
race walk and a 3rd place finish in the 5,000-meter run in
his final appearance · at ihe
indoor meet.
His efforts afforded the
Redi;Ilen 16 points for the
meet which tied Rio Grande
for 8th overall with Southern
University-New Orleans.
The Redwomen tinished in
a tie for 21st with dght points
thanks to junior Billie
Robinson's runner-up performance in the women's 3,000meter race walk on Friday.
Rio was tied with Minot
State (NO) and Goshen
College.

.Girls basketball
state tourney
pairings
SEMIFINALS
AU games at St. John Arena, CoJumtNs
DIVISION I
Youngs. Boardman (22-3) vs. Cin. MI.
Notre Dame (24-2), Friday, . 6 p.m.:
Sylvania N'orthvlew (25·1) vs . Da~.
Chaminade-Julienne (23-2), Friday, 8 p.m.
A nsls- Saturday, 8:30p.m.

.
DtVISION H
Dresden Tri-Va!ley. (24-1) · vs. Cols .
Eastmoor (24·2) , Thursday, 1 p.m.; Mentor

Lake Gath. (18-8) vs. Cuyahoga Falis
Walsh Jesu" (23-3). Thursday. 3 p.m.
Finals- Salun:hly._10:45 a.m.

DIVISION nl
Hamler

Patrick' Henry (24-1) vs.
Waynesvillo (23-3), Friday, I p.m.; lronlon
(24-1) va. S. Eucid Regina (23-3) , 'Frklay,
3p.m.

Finals -'.Saturday. 5: '5 p.m.
DIVISION IV
Berlin Hiland (26..0) vs. Mansflekt St
Potera (20-5) , Thurlday, 6 p.m.; Xenia

. Chriallan (23· 1) vs. Ottoville (22·3).
Thurtday, 8 p.m.
l'inltls -

.,

Shaq celebrates birthday by blowing out Cavs, -102-82
BY

TUPPERS PLAINS Pre-sale
tickets
for
Eastern's regional tournament game against either
Wellington or Africentric
Tuesday in Columbus c~n
be purchased at the high
school during the school
days of today and Tuesday. ·
Adult tickets are $6 and
student tickets are $5. Preschool kids will be admitted free ·to the game.. All
tickets are $6 a1 the
Fairgrounds.
The athletic gener I fund
gets · 25 percent of the
money from all tickets sold
at Eastern High School.
Doors wi II ope A to the general public 75 .minutes
before tip-off of the first
scheduled game.
There will also be a pep
rally at Eastern High School
at 7 p.m. today for the Eagles
basketball team. Fans are
encouraged to come and support Eastern at this gathering
before its game with
Africentric on Tuesday.

Boyles strong
in final meet

Jeff Hall. the captain of The Lorena sternwheeler, shows of the boat's sternwheel at Zane's Landing Park in 'zanesville. City and
county officials are searching for funds to save a replica of an. 1800s-era paddleboat that has ferried tourists up and down the
Muskingum River since 1976. ·It costs Muskingum County about $100,000 a year to operate the Lorena stern-wheeler, which
brought in only $60,000 in passenger revenue last year.

drop from 55 early this
evening to . 39. Winds will
be · I0 to 20 MPH from the
southwest turning from the
northwest as the · evening
progresses.
Overnight (1-6 a.m.) .
It should remain cloudy.
Temperatures will fall from
37 to today's low of 27 by
6:00am. Winds will be 10 to
15 MPH' from the northwest.

.... - ~

Spring varsity sports ·
c.oaches are reminded to send
us your schedules for the
upcoming season as soon as
possible.
You may e-mail them to
sports@mydailytribune.com,
fax. them to 446-3008, or
drop them off at our
Gallipolis office on Third
Ave.
Schedules are needed fQr
baseball, softball, tennis and
track and field.

AP photo

M"nday, March 7
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
. It should be a breezy and
cloudy
rnorning.
Temperatures will rise from
4:;! to 59 by late this morning. Winds will be I0 to 20
MPH from the southwest.
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
It should be a cloudy
afternoon. Expect light rain.
The rain is predicted to start
near 2:00pm. Expect accumulations of 0.17 inches.
Today's high of 61 will
occur around !2:00pm as
temperatures diminish to 55
by late afternoon. Winds
will be 10 to 15 MPH from
the, southwest.
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
It wiU continue .to be
cloudy. Moderate rain is
expected. The rainfall is
expected to end around
9:00pm with total accumuJa;
tions for this event near 0.38
inches. Temperatures will

Reds beat Yankees, Page B2
Tribe, Tigers battle to tie, Page B2
Smith named OSU athletic director, Page B6
Tiger wins Dora!, claims No. 1 spot, Page 86

Spring coaches
reminder

ORE

the county's $25 million general-fund budget.
Za.nesville officials have
agreed to cover up to
$20,000 in operating losses ·
for the boat.
" I would hate to see it go,"
Mayor Jack Fenton said. "I
had my class reunion there
five years ago." ..
Built in Arkansas, the paddleboal' was purchased in
1976 and brought to this city
about 50 miles east of
Columbus for the Zane Trace
Commemoration, an annual
celebration featuring parades
and other events.
In 1987, the county and
city paid $55,000, along with
another $15,000 in private
funds, to buy the Lorena
from
the Zane Trace
Commemoration, according
to the Zanesville-Muskingum
Couniy
Convention
&amp;

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

I

S.turtlay. 2

p.m.

ToM

WITHERS

· Associated Press
CLEVELAND - Shag 's
birthday_ was just another
party for the Miami Heat.
Shaquille O'Neal spent
much of. hi s 33rd birthday in
foul trouble but Eddie Jones
scored 19 points, Dwyane
Wade and Udonis Haslem
added 18 apiece and the Heat
won their· tifth straight, I0282 over the collapsing
Cleveland Caval·iers on
. Sunday night.
O'Neal played just 19 minutes in the first three quarters,
but the Heat actually played
better without their All-Star
· center. While O'N~!al sat out

with four fouls , Miami
outscored · Cleveland I ~-8
over the final 6:23 of the
third to take control.
O'Neal finished with 13
points, live rebounds and six
assists _in his third game back
after missing four games with
II pointsdand 13 rebounds fur
a sprained
left
knee.
Cl
. b
eve 1an .
. . 1.t.
Mta~
1 •. 0
.
to !Is est start
Down by II at, the half, the
tn franchtse htstory, bas won . Cavaliers appeared to cateh a
12 ot 14.
big hreak when O' Neal
LeBron James scored 23 pi cked up his fourth foul
points for the Cavaliers, who midway through the third
have lost six straight, seven period and had to .take a seat.
of eight and look nothing like The Heat . though . moveu
the team that led the Central more fluidl y on the offensive
Division for much of the first end without the middle
half of the season.
pluggLd up and ripped off a
Zydrunas llgauskas added 14-2 spttrt to take a 77-56
22 points and Drew Gooden lead.

The Caval iers, meanwhile .
seltled for too many jump
shot s and made OtJ iy 6 of 23
attempts in the third .
Early in the fourth . Eddie
Jones, Keyon Dooling and
Damon Jones liit 3-puinters
as Miami built its lead to 22
and Cleve land fans began to
drown out the incessant
mu sic in the arena with boos.
Midway lhrough the quar~
ter, Cavs coach Paul Silas
decided he had seen enough
and benched his starters wi th
the Heat up 94-74.
O'Neal played just three
minutes in the first quarter
whe·n he picked up his second
personal and had to sit. But
even with Miami's big man

· out , the Cavaliers couldn't
take advantage and only led
· 25-24 after one .·
·
The hirthday boy didn't
score · his firsl points until
earl y in the second quarter-.
a Shaq-like dunk that pu! him
in 17th place on the NBA's
scoring list , two points ahead
of Adrian Dantley (73, 177). ·
However, O' Neal's frustration surfaced a few minutes
later when he yelled, "Let's
clean thi s (stuff) up," at referee Sean. Corbin and got
slapped with a technical. But
the big fella settled down,
scoring II points in the period as the Heat outscored the
Cavaliers ~JJ- 19 to take a 5544 halftime lead.

D I V IS I 0 N IV R E G I 0 N A L P R E V I E W

Eagles face tough test .with Africentric

Africentric Nubians (23-1)

,

No.

BY BRYAN WALTERS

Bernie Afew

Brandon

3
4
5

bwa~ers@ mydailytribune.com

,,

COLUMBUS - So far
in this 2004-05 basketball
postseason, Eastern has
had the right answer for
every question they have
beeri faced with.
Tuesday in the Division
IV regional tournament at
the Ohio Expo Center, the
Eagles (20-3) will take oti
its toughest .test· of the
year.
Columbus Africenttic
Secondary School , which
finished No. I in the final
D-IV Associated Press
poll, has steamrolled past a
. majprity of its competition
in an impressive fashion.
The Nubians (23-l) finished unblemished in the
dreaded Columbus City
League this season with a
15-0 record, and marched
easily to the . regional
semis by an average of 37
points.
The Purple and Black
sports a deep bench,
tremendous athleticism, a
solid core of starters and
an aggressive style that
. can overwhelm most anyone on both ends . of the
floor.
With that said, Eastern
coach· Howie Caldwell
believes that controlling .
tempo may be the only
way to slow down the
Franklin Countians.'
"Africentric is an outstanding defensive team.
Their defense makes their
offense go," he said. "If
they get steals · and
turnovers and make this an
up and down game, it is
definitely to their advantage. If we have numbers
on the break, we are going
to take it, but we are going
to slow it down and be
patient with our offense."
That won't be an easy
task, as CASS uses a manto-man press to dictate
tan McNemarlphoto
tempo and is off and running after every rebound.
Eastern's Chris Myers, with ball, patiently looks inside during the Eagles ' district final con~
In Africentric's district test with Whiteoak Friday at the Convo. Myers and the Eagles will have to be even more
final
victory
over poi'Sed and patient against Division IV No. 1 Africentric Tuesday if they wish to move on to
the regional final in Columbus. Eastern and t)le Nubians will tip-off at 6:15 p.m. in the regionPle•se see Test. Bl
al semis at the Ohio Expo Center.
·

'HI,

Name

15
21
22
23
24
32
33
34
44

owers

,

5'1 1

5'11

Tyk iem Moss

5'11

Rob Stevenson
T1m Mapg
Antoine raketord

6'5
6'2
6'2
6'1
5'10
6'7
6'1
6'2
6'3

Marquise Hamler

Pierre Peterson
Travante Leftenanl
lance Sullivan
Isaiah Carter

Donald Suel
LaOuawn Perry
Nicholas Bush

6'3 .

6'4

Yr.
10
12
10

,nta
12
12
11
12
12
10
12
12
12

Head coach: Mike Thornton

Sa11on riwultw
Wellington .......... . . .73-53 W
0 Toledo Libbey . .. ... . .7o-50· L
Eastmoor Academy .... . .7o-58 W
@Walnut Ridge .. .. .... 76-56 .W
@ Marion Franklin . ·...... 86-82 W
II Briggs
........... 83-58 W
Upper Arlington ......... 75-47 W

S Urban Academy ....... 80-tn W
II Be•ley . . ........... 79·58 W
Columbus West ......... 63-59 W
Cleveland South .. , ..... 69-56 W
@ Independence . . . . . . .69-51 W
0 Eastmoor Academv .... 81-63 .W
Marion Franklin ......... 1, 4·88 W
Wal nut Ridge ......... .. 90-71 W
~riggs ... .' ..... . . : ...84·48 W

0 S Urban Academv , . .. .90- n W
@ Calumbus West ....... 63·44 W

Independence .... , .....82-57
Brookhaven
...... . . .4443
Liberty Christian . . . . .. • .83-18
Delaware Christian ..... .57·30
Fairbanks . . ... . . .. . .. .92·62
Wellington
... . . .... 73·46

W
W
W
W

W
W

Points for : .
. . . .. .1826 (76., )
Points against: ......... . 1356 (56.5)

Eastern Eagles (20-3)
No.
4
10
12
14
20
22
24
30
32
34
42

44
40

Name
Justin Browning
Derek Baurn
Nathan Cozart
Alex McGrath
Brian Castor
Adam Dillard.
Ed Beatty
Mark Guess
Chris Carroll
Chris Meers
Robert ross
Cody Dill
Derek Roush

HI.
5'8
5'9
5'11
5'10
5'10
5'9
5'9
5'10
6'1
5'10

Yr.
10
12
11
10
11
12
12

11
12
12
12
12
11

6'~

6'4
5'11

Head coach: Howie Caldwell
S:IIIDD [UUill:
@Waverly ............. 67_.5 W
0 Trimble ............. 70.61 W
South Gallla .... . ..... .73-41
Federal Hocking
... ... 71-89
Nelsonville- York .
. . .72-83
Waterford . . . . .
. . . 73-43

Meigs .. .. .. ..
Vinton County . .
@ River Valley . . .

W
.. .85-62 W

. .... .72-56 W
. . ... .75-64 W

@ Southern . . .. . . . .
oou vs. Claymont ~ .

Miller

W
L
W

. .55-47 W
. .. 67-65 W

............... 57-46 W

Southeastern .. . .... ... 55~45 W
0 Federal Hocking .......84-70 L

·0 Waterford
..63-34 W
Ironton ............ ·.. ,60·58 L
Southern .
@

. .. 60-38 W

Wellstoo . . , ..•...... 92-60 W

0 Miller .. ...... . ... . ~ - 53 W
Trimble . .............. 78·61 W
Southeastern ....... .... 75·40 W
Green

... ......... , .. 55·25 W

Whilaoak .

. .......6-1-57 W

Points tor: .... .. ... .... 1572 (68.3!

Points agairist: .... .... .. 1221 (53.1

Buckeyes shock
unbeaten Illinois
Bv RUSTY

MILLER

Associated Press
COLUMBUs· · - Their
perfect season gone, the
next challenge for the lllini
is turning ·a loss into a lesson._.
"Everyone says a: loss wiJI
help. We' ll tinct .out."
Illinois coach Bruce Weber
said. "We' ll learn from it
and move on . This next
stretch is the most important
of the year and that's what
peor.Je are going to remember.
Ohio · State reserve forward Matt Sylvester hit a 3pointer with 5.1 seconds left
on Sunday to hand the topranked lll ini .their first
defeat, 65-64.
The l!lini (29-1 , 15- 1)
were trying to cap the Big

Ten's first unbeaten season
in 29 years. Instead. they
fritte red away a 12-point
lead: in the· second half and
didn't score over the tina! 3
minutes.
Sylvester scored a careerhigh 25 points- eight more
than his previous best - for
a team that was banned by
its own administrators from
the postseason .two months
ago to mitigate pQssible
NCAA violations committed under former coach Jim
O' Brien.
·
"We were in the huddle
and Coach told us. 'We· re
not going halfway: . We're
going for lhe win.'''
Sylvester said.
·
First-year coach Thad
Matta drew up a play in
which center Terence Dials

Ple•se see Shock. H

AP photo

Ohio State's Matt Sylvester celebrates their 65 : 64 win over number one ranked Illinois
Sunday in Columbus . Sylvester had 25 points inCluding the final thfee pointer that put
Ohio State ahead .
·
u

�I·

I

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, March 7,

www.mydailysentinel.com
·.
.

2005

Monday, March 7, 2005

www..mydailysentinel.com

'

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL -

~ribune

- Sentinel - l\egigter
C L A S S I F-1
. ED

SPRING TRAINING

Cincinnati keeps Yankees winless in·spring with 6-5 win
BY RONALD BLUM
Associat~d

Press

TAMPA, Fla. Kevin
Brown's back didn't ache
and Gary Sheffie ld's shoulder didn ' t . hurt . The New
York Yankees reniained winless in spring training but
were pleased with _the 2005
debuts of two stars coming
off major injuries.
Brown struggled through
the first inning, allowing a
run and three hits. Then he
made some adjustments and
followed with t:,vo scoreless
innings Sunday tn New
York 's 6-5 loss to the
Cinci.nnati Reds .
."At least I felt Iike I was
moving OK. I didn't feel like
I was locked up. It wasn't an
issue," he said.
Sheffield, recovering ·from
an offseason operation on his
left shoulder, went 2-for-3
with a pair of RBI singles to
second base. The Yankees
started their regular lineup

for the first time this yea&lt;"-·
New
York
an All-Star at every position. fell to 0-3 with
"Just to know that you can a tie, wasting a
play a baseball game without 5-3 lead in the
feeling the agony or the pain ninth
when
I had last vear, I can't really Cincinnati raJ explain it,'' Sheffield said. " I lied
against
just know when I'm healthy · Tom Gordon,
what I can do."
helped by an error and . a
Jason Giambi went 0-for-2 · passed ball.
.
Owner
George
with a sacrifice fly and a hitby ~ pitch , dropping to 1-for-7 Steinbrenner, who in the past
with one RBI thi.s spring.
. has wanted wins even in
"It's starting to come now. spring training, was able to
I'm happy,"' he said.
joke about the start.
"We're very co nsistent :
Following a year of illness
and an offseason in . the los·e, lose, lose," he said.
Brown's health could be a
steroids spot li ght, Giambi
has been received warmly by major factor in the Yankees'
fans. That could c hange pitching . He didn't feel right
Monday, when a Yankees' all of last yea~, and he was
sp lit squad goes to Fort the loser in Game 7 against
Myers for New York's first Boston.
game against Bosto n since
He made 53 pitches against
'the Red Sox overcame a 3-0 the Reds. allowing four hits
deficit to win last Octobers and two · walks with four
AL chiunpionship·scries.
strikeout s.
" I loved what I saw,"
"They're not going to say
anything I haven't heard catcher Jorge Posada said.
Often . a curmudge.on,
before or I haven'.t said
t.n yself," Giambi said.
Brown spent much of the

offseason walked off the mound.
working on ~is
"I was just frustrated," he
· back
align- said. "When you're not
ment, getting throwing the ball where you
help from a want to throw it, I don ' t care
spec i a I is t if it is spring training, you're
when he was j'ust trying to g,ather yourself
back home in and figure out a way to make
Georgia. Even when he was a change."
winning at the start of last
Sheffield managed to be
seaso.n, he didn 't think he ttie team's best hitter last
waspitching effectively. The year despite the injury, batright-hander, who turns 40 ting .290 witti 36 homers and
next week, was 14-9 with a . 121 RB!s. But his left shoul2.39 ERA for Los Angeles in der hurt so much he was
2003 before slipping to I 0-6 · forc(!d to catch balls at his
with 'a 4.09 ERA last year. · hip.
"In my mind's eye, I want
He overdid batting practice
to be the pitcher that I was when he first · arrived in
two years ago," he said. ,"! Tampa, and slowed himself
felt like I pitched probably down. He wasn't elevating
about as well as anybody in the ball in batting practice
the game."
until Saturday, and credited
He gave up an RBI single center
fielder
Bernie
to Rich Aurilia in the first Williams with telling him
and loaded the bases before that he was ready.
striking
out
Edwin
Sheffield sa id the absence
Encarnacion to end the of pain -was noticeable.
. inning. Brown had fla shed
"I was pretty shocked on a
his anger during the inning couple of swings I took." he
when he walked a batter and said.

Noles! Cincinnati starter
Ramon Ortiz allowed three
runs in the third on Derek
Jeter's
RBI .
single,
Sheffie ld 's : sing le
and
Giambi's opposite-field sac· rifice fly to left. The Reds
rallied in the ninth when
third
baseman
Felix
Escalona , threw·
away
Encarnacion's grounder, Joe
DePastino al·lowed a runscoring· passed ball · and
Bobby Estalella hit an RBI
double. Ben Kozlowski got
the win end Todd Coffey the
save .... Yankees LHP Randy
Johnson, scratched from hi s
first
scheduled
start
Thursday because of left calf
tightness, threw 56 pitches iD
the bullpen. He is scheduled
to make hi s-first spring training start Tuesday against
Atlanta .. .. New York closer
Mariano Rivera - and LHP
Mike Stanton are set to .make
their spring training debuts
in Monday 's home sp iltsquad
game
aga inst
Cleveland.

St.
Tribe battles Tigers to 1o·inning tie Lakewood
.
Edward captures
hockey crown
.

WINTER HAYEN, Fla.
(AP) - Cleveland's C.C.
Sabathia was scra tc hed
from hi s schedu led start
Sunday because of a muscle
strain before the Indians
played to a 2-2, 10-inning
tie with the Detroit Tigers.
Sabathia, scheduled to. be
Cleveland's opening day
starter, · strained a right
abdomin~l muscle as he
warmed up ill the bullpen.
Manager Eric Wedge said
it was too early .to tell if his
ace Would miss any time.
but the 24-year-old is
scheduled · for an MRI
examination Monday mornmg.

"We' ll see how it ·goes
tomorrow," Wedoe said.
"He was upset. l take that as
a guy who knows he
worked so hard to get ready

Test
from Page 81
:Wellington, the Nubians
turned a 32-19 intermission
advantage irito a 48-21 rout
over a span of 3:30 in the
third quarter. That 16-2
swing allowed CASS to
cruise to an impressive 73-46
victory, setting up Tuesday!s
showdown.
Caldwell e~pressed concerns about the offensive and
defensive juggernaut that
Africentric can be.
"Because of their quickness,
we have to limit our turnovers.
If we .have more than 14
turnovers in the game, we're
going to be in trouble. If we
come in under that number,
we've got a g&lt;JO&lt;j shot," said
Caldwell. "We also have to
shoot-a good
percentage
from
,
.
thfl
.
.
e oor.
He also expressed concerns
about the opponent's boarding
abilities.
·
"Rebounding is one of the
things t]lat we have stressed in
practice. That is a key to the
outcome of this game," elaborated Caldwell . "We must
check out and we have to jumP.
to get the rebound. We can t
rely on Cody (Dill) to get the
majority of rebounds; everybody has to do their job in
rebounding the ball."
Senior Donald Su.el (6-foot3, 21.8 points per game) was
named the Central district's
Player of t.he Year in Division
IV, but classmate.s Lance
Sullivan (6-l. 13.6) and
LaQuawn Perry (6-3, 12.9)
also bring plenty of firepower
to the offensive attack. All
three are terrors on the ·boards
3nd have the capabilities of
bringing the ball up the floor. ·
Sullivan is the top 3-poi.nt .
shooter on the team with 37,
trifectas this season, while
Perry brings a physical style
that resembles more of a linebacker and less of a baskeiball
player.
·
Rounding out the starting
five are seniors Travante
Leftenant (6-7, . 7.3) and
Marquise Hamler (6-1 , 5.9).
Also expected to see playing
time are Brandon Bowers,
Pierre Peterson, Isaiah Carter,
Nicholas Bush, Tim Mapp,
Rob
Bernie
Agnew,
Stevenson, Tykiem Moss and
Antoine Drakeford.
With such a tall task at hand,
one can see how opponents
can be intimidated by

•

for the season."
Sabathia came to
camp in the best
shape of his career
after going through a
winter conditioning
program. The 6-foot7, 290-pounder had
missed his final three starts ·
of the 2004 seaso n with a
strained left hamstring.
The
left-hander
was
replaced by lefty Cliff Lee,
who allowed one hit and
struck 9Ut two in lwo scoreless innings.
. " I don't know what happened to C.C., but l could
tell something was going
on," Lee said. "Fifteen minutes before game time. they
told me I was starti ng. It
was no big deal bec·ause I
knew I was .going to pitch
two innings today anyway."

.
Africentric. When one adds in
the fact that it is a regional
semifinal and the loser goes
home, the pressure would be
enough to make most teams
buckle in this type. of atmosphere.
Caldwell believes that his
team is focused and more than
ready to prove otherwise. .
"These kids have played in-a
lot of big games in their career.
We've been 1in this . situation
before and we are certainly
looking at this game as a chal. lenge," commented Caldwell.
"There aren't too many teams
that get the chance to play the
number one team -in the state
of Ohio, but we are not going
(o roll over and play dead. We
are going to go out and play
our game. I also believe that in
the 23 games we' ve played
this year, we have yet to play
our best game."
·

The Indians loaded
the bases in the bottom of the l Ot]l on
three one-out walks
by reliever John
Ennis, who then
struck out Jeff' Liefer
and got Ryan Garko
to pop to short to preserve
the lie.
.
" It was a well-pitched
game," said Tigers manager
Al"an Trammell. "We missed
some opportunities to score,
but we got our work in and
stayed healthy so it's a good
day."
Seven Tigers .pitchers
combined to allow only six
h!ts while striking _out' eight:
Ftrst baseman Chns Shel!on
had three of the Tigers'
seven
hits
off
nine
Cleveland pitchers.
Jose Hernandez had an

And 'the players· also know
that it is gm ng to take a.more
consistent effort to pull Qf this
upset. That is, accordipg to
floor general Nathan Cozart.
"We didn't play very well
Friday, but" we never gave up,"
said Cozart. "We are going to
have to · play a lot better
Tuesday because we don't
want the season to end at
regionals. We have big hopes
and we have another chance to ·
show how great we are. When
we play up to our expectations, we can play with anyone
in the state."
And as Ohio State proved
Sunday in Columbus against
No. I Illinois, games aren't
settled on paper - they are
settled on the tloor.
The Eagles shot at another
Columbus-based upset starts .
at 6: 15 p.m. Tuesday at the
Fairgrounds-.

WHAT: Pilatesis adynamic exerciseprogram, allowing participants to
improve their core body strength, while increasing their flexibility,
muscle tone and coordination. ·
·
\

WHO: Anyone can join! This is a beginner's class, focusing on fonn
·and.technique. All exercises can be modified to fit your personal needs
aild limitations'.
·
.

WHY: The benefits are enormous- lose inches, gain strength, improve
flexibility•and posture and decrease pain.
·
WHEN: Class will begin March 13th and last for 6 weeks, Sundays
and WedllfSdays at ~ pm at Rocksprings Rehab Center. An advanced
class will be held on the same nights at 6pm.
HOW: Class size is very limited. Please contact Erin Roush soon at
Rocksprings Rehab Center, 992-6606. Class rate is $75 to be paid in
full on the ~rst night All previous enrollments in the cancelled August
session will be honored. New participanls are always
•
welcome!
INSTRUCTOR: Allison G. Barnett, CPT' Cenlfied

Pilates Instmctor

RBI single and minorleague infielder Brandon
Pinckney hit a home run for
Cleveland.
The Tigers got an R B l
double by Craig Monroe
and also scored on a double-play "grounder.
Notes:
The
Tigers
defeated Tampa Bay, 4-2,
in a morning " B" game in
Lakeland. Detroit RHP
Fernan(lo Rodney, in his
first outing· since having
reconstructive
elbow
surgery last April, pitched
a scoreless inning, striking
out two .. . . . The Indians
announced thai RHP Adam
Miller, considered the top
prospect in their organization, will be sidelined until
Nne with a strained right
elbow.

Rocfls,rings

REHABIUJ'ATION CENTER .
Equnl Oppol'lllllily Provider of Smictl

740-992-6686

.

.

mate Kyle Botos, . and beat
COLUMBUS (AP)
Shaker
Heights goalie Alex
Jeremy Lascko scored two
goals in the third period, Antolino.
Lascko added another
leading . Lakewood St.
Edward to a · 2-0 victory goa l less thar three min over Shaker Hei ghts in the utes later off a rebound.
The Red Raiders (24-8)
suite hockey finals ori
pulled Antolino with l :30
Sunday.
It was the second consec- ' to play, but couldn't overutive title for the 'Eagles come a St. Edward defense
(29-IO:l).
that hasn't allowed a goal
La-scko scored at the· in it s la s t three games.
three-minute mark of the Eagles
goalie
Everett
third period when tie swept Graves f ini shed .with 2 1
up a deflected puck follow- saves , while Antolino t:ining a breakaway by team - i shed with 23.
I

G•lli.• C~~truy, 011

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IIllO

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person at State Route 62 N
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(304)773-5670

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'

I

· to

-

SECRETARY
ADMISSIONS OFFICE

The University of Rio
45760. EOE
Grande Invites applications
McClure'! Ae!taurant now tor the poSition of Secretary
hiring all locations. tull or · in the University's Actniissior:
part-tlrile, pick up applies· Office.
·
lion at location &amp; bring baCk
between
9:30am
&amp; Responsibilities InclUde. but
11 :OOam, Monday thru are not limited to. prOVldlng
general secretanal and crklr·
Saturday.

~~

"---iriililrlllliiiO._.I

POSITION
ANNOUNCEMENT

resumes .to : Charla BrownMcGuire, AN , LNHA.
Administrator, 333 Page
Street, Middleport, Ohio

BEAUTIFUL
MENTS
AT

NeighbOrhood. 3 bedroom, ;;::=::;;====~
1· 1/2 batt1s , large familY. 11
room, fireplaCe. central air. r10
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FOR JbNr
city schools. ,$123,000.
(740)446-7881 .
2 bedroom
house
in

PRICES AT JACKSON
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Drive from $344 fo $442.
Walk to shop &amp; mO\Ites. Call
740-446·2568:
Equal
Housing Opportunity.

Neat. c lean ranch style
home located It') Racine. Oh.
This home. has 3 bedrooms.
1 bath, one car garage, storage bar{1, large deck, appli~
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3090 an~irTie after 5pm.

www.orvb.com
Home Listings.
List your home by calling

(740)4.16-3S20
View photoS/info online.
Point Pleasant, WV. 4
Bedroom, 1 Bath, Many
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March i 2, 1Oam·6pm .
Code 2l65 or call
304)675-4125

R-ood Cape Cod.
Home. 9.5 Acres , 4

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(Careers Close To Home)
up to 4 rOOms .
Fn.. ust . ave as1c com- Wanted- licensed P'hys1cal Gall Today! 740-446-4367,
Free 50 + Prem1um
puler, phone and filing skills. T_herapy Assistant for home
1-BCJ0.214-0452
chanAels
Please send resume to .health services. Please send
wwwgallipoliicareerc~lege.cam
·
·
Ffee
OVD player
.
E8#3 200 . Main St. Pt. re::.ume to McGraw Phys1cal Accredited Member Accrediting
Pleasant WV 25550.
Therapy, Inc., P.O. Box 983 .
tor t
'colleges
carl tor details
1
Call 1-B00-523· 7556
Maintenance Director
Jackson, OH 45640 or call
Overbrook Rehabilitation
(740)286 -6631 ·
Jewelry. Buy Sell Gold,
Center IS now accepting
Wanted
Manager
and'
Diamonds, 1
Gemstones
resumes for the position of
Experienced Auto Boc;ty
DHK Cleaning. · Do you R~pa1 r, Appraisals, . Gem
Maintenance Director. The. man Collision painting &amp;
need? House Cleaning or Test1ng
Graduate
qualified candidate must
fra.me experience necesElderly
Care,
Outside G~mologist ,
Jeweler.
possess strong \lerbal and
sary. Call (740)44&amp;4466 to
Ma1ntenence (powerwash· (740)645·6365 or (740)446wnnen communication skills , set up an a'ppo1ntment.
ing. etc) Call (740)985· 3080.
including technical report
3633 1(7 40)416 - 1823
writing and record keeping.
· . s·.\sSY SCISSORS
References available. Ask
TURNED DOWN ON
Must have mcperience iri
Stylist wanted . Salary/
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
general maintenance
Commtssion. 740-44~·1880 tor Karen/Dave.
No Fee Unless We Win!~
including carpentry. plumbor 740-256-6336 .
Georges . Portable Sawmill.
1-888· 582·3345
ing, electrical, telephone . ' - - - - - - - - - don't haul your logs to the
and cable installation, paint•.-~•
'"'"::,:t.~.
mill just call304-675·1957. ·
l ~ t ' I I \ I 'II
1
ing ,grounds work, evalua·
~,.;
tlon and inspection of emerB ,,,,.
3
,;; OIJLI)'Eu)[RJ:v
gency equipment, item
·~
.
1
, .
CARE
assembly, and boiler ~ysr., . ,.,~•
tern operation. Must have
Babysitting·
Very
knowledge of OSHA, Ute
Reasonable Rates. Ages 4
2615 Mt. Vernon . 1 story, 2
Safety COde, HVAC and
and ·under. Call Crystal
br
.. bsmt. wl tam. rm. bedrm,
Building Code. Long term
(740)441-!1654 .. (740)590·
bath. large det., gar/shop,
care ~perlence pretarred
· Floating Date. 2590.
chain link fence, great loeabut not required. Qualified
March 1 , 2005
Mn $79,000. 304-675-6882
candidates may senct

r

16

B~

OrPoinuNnY

I

Lw-·iirililililliiiii-.,1
2

.,_

"'

OHIO · VALLE Y PUBLISH
NG CO. recommen.d s· the
~u do business with peo
le you know. and NOT t
end money through lh
~al l until you have Invest!
ated the otferlno.

.3 Bdrm Ranch . 2 bath. LA,
FA . basement. 2 flreplaces,
2 car garage. Centenary.
(740)4&lt;16·1035.
3 Bedroom 1 &amp; t/2 bath,
new·Windows &amp; root .lOcated
12 Smith St . Kings town
ares River-view available No
Down-Payment
$425.1
month (304)675.2749

APART~

--------- Near' Holzer Hospital. Good -

1

i .~

Beautiful 2-story townhouse ,
overlooking Gall1polis C1ty
park. Kitchen-fam1ly, D.R .,
LA. 3 B.R . study, 2 baths,
laundry area . References
reqUired , s~cunty deposit ,
no pets $900 per mo.
(740)446·2325 or (740)446·
_44_2_5_ _ _ _ _ __

r

REAL FsrATE

·--iriiiiiiriiiiii0.-.,1

Must have high school. diplo~
ma or equivalerlt AssoCiate
Degree in secfetarial sci ence or computer technology preferred. Must have
knowledge of personal and
mainframe
comp uters. 8orrow Smart. Contact th
Confidentiality a must. Good
jphio Divi~ion of Financia
oral and written communica· Institution 's
Oftice
o
tion sk1Us required .
jEonsumer
Affa1r
l&amp;eFOAE you refinanc
All applicants must submit a
tyour home or obtain a loan
letter of Interest and resume
i:'IEWARE
of requests fo
inci!.JdinQ the names and
illny large adVanc~ pay
addresses of three refer·
ments of lees or insurance
ences on or before March
·c an
the
Off1ce
o
14. 2005 to Ms. Phylli s Consumer Affairs taU freE
Mason. SPHR Director of
~t 1-866-278..()003 to lear
Humart
Resources , ., the mortgage broker o
University of Rio Grande.
ender is properly licens'ed
P.O. Box 500, A1o Grande, (This is a public servicE
OH 45674 . e-mail pmannouncement from thE
son@rlo.edu . fax 740-245Oh10 Valley Publish1n~
4909.
Company)

r.'='•E•EO•I~A:"'A•E•m•p•loy•e•l-.,

1 BUY HOMES
Need to sell your home
quickly because ol
a
divorpe, bankruptcy, job
' transfer, or death. Don 't let
the bank foreclose and ruin
your cred it. Local person ,
buys houses. Fast clos 1ngs
All cash . Jim
(740)992·

We have approximately · 13
used homes for undef
$2,000, 1.·800-837·3238

lnfor'rned that all
dwellings advertlaed In
this newspaper are
available on an &amp;qual
opportunity baaea.

TOloo.N

..___.;W,;,AN11Diiiioiiii;.,_.l

finance you a home. Call
(304)736·3400

readers are hereby

3
'room
and
bath ,
stove/refngerator.
down stairs ." all utilities pald. 46
Olive
Street
$450.
(740)446-3945 .
Appli&lt;;a110ns being taken Jor
very nice, clean 2 bedroom
apartment in country sett1ng,
yet close to town . on
Centenary Road Washet. ·
dryer, stove. fridge, diSh·
washer prov1ded Total elec·
tric w!AC . Tenant pays electric No pets. no smokmg.
$400 deposit, $475 ·per
month Water included. 74()..
446-2205 or 740-446-9585
' Ask for Virginia.

SSI/ Social Security

•t•t•

© 2005 by NEA, Inc.

2BR apt ·state Route 160
Onder $400/month, sto\lelrefngeraMike , tor included, washer/dryer
hookup. ·(740)441-0194 or
(740}441·1184

$1.300 Net income, We can

Thla newapaper Will not
knowingly accept
advertlumenta for real
whlc:h Ia In
violation of the law. Our

'3-1

in\lentory Clearance
5 used homes
$2,000.00
Call
(740)385-7671 .

SAVE-SAVE-SAVE
Stock mOdels at old pnces,
2005 models 'arriving Now,
Cole's
Mobile
HOmes.
15266 U.S. 50 East. Athens.
OhiO 45701 , (740)592·t972.'
"Where You Get Your
Money's Worth~

AU real estate advertlalng
·In thla newspaper Is
aubject to the Federal
Fair Houaing Act of 1968
which makea It Illegal to
advertise "any
preference, limitation·or
d.lscrlmlnaUon based on
race, color, reUgton, •••
familial atatus Of"netlonal
origin, or any Intention to
make any 8UCh
pref.,.nce, limitation or
i:naerlminatlon."

COMPANY in
HUNTINGTON looking for
EXPERIENCED dump lruck
dnv~rs,
asphalt labors
equtp. oper. P.O. BOx 3105,
Huntington, WV 25702 ·

currently accepting appltea·
lions for Fu11-Time and Part·
Time LPN's. Anyone mterested please come in an fill
out an applicat ion at 333
Page Street, Middleport. Oh
EOE

FOR SALE

-~

ASPHALT

r

MOBILE HOMHl

3 bedroom. 2 bath, fireplace.
on 1 6 acres. Rio Grande
area.
$85,000.
Call
(740)709-1166.

current JOb and looking

ATIN : needed 23 people to
lose up to 30 lb$. in the neKt
MUST BE 21
An Excellent way to Sarn 30 days. 100% natural.
100o/o
guaranteed.
no
money. The New Avon.
GIVEAWAY
ephedra. Call~ 1·888·2.34·
Call Marilyn 304·882-2645
5146. or Visit www.newMixed-breed pups. 6 man. Due to agency's growth. shaperesults.com
otd,has all shots. females I local Home Health Agency
www.comics.com
males fixed to good home is seeking Home· H~alth Auto Parts Manager. Must
Aides for the GallipOlis area have working knowledge of
304-458·2002
and the Meigs county area . automotive practices an'd
No Training necessary, parts applicatidns. Musf 1110 lJELPWANnD
·
FOUND .
agency will train. We offer have bas1c computer skills, ~-------.,1
flex1ble scheduling. Those including Microsoft Olt1ce: '
&amp;
EMT's
Reward for information or interesh3,d sho uld please call ability to handle matl order Paramedics
return of Calico cat, Monkey (740)441-1377 or (866)441- phone calls , expenence m needed . Apply at 1354
auto parts: retail/wholesale ' Jackson Pike, Gallipolis
1377.
Run area, (740)992-5896
sales preferred FUll time
position. Calf' Hill's Classic
PARTS DEPARTMENT
Cars; 7:00AM , to Monday
: 4x4's For Sale ..........,....,.............................. 725
thru Frid~y. tor aPpomtment.. One of Ohio's leading motor
carriers has an immediate
· Announcemeni: ...........................................030
(740)949-2217
opening for a qualified Parts
Antlques ................................:...................... 530
AVON! All Areas! To· Buy or Person.
Expei1ence
Apart!llents lor .Rent'.. ................................. 440
Sell
Shtrley Spears, 304- required. We offer top pay
Auction and Flea Market.............................oeo
and benefits for the right
675-1429.
: Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
person . Three and a half day
. Auto Repalr ............~ ...:.................................
Bates Bro.s. Amusement Co. work week. paid vacation.
Spring/Summer, Must Be 17 personal days. health insurAutos lor Sale .............................................. 710
Or Older And Able To Travel ance.' paid holidays, over·
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
Late
March-Late time pay, 401K plan and
Building Supplles .................................,.......550
September.
Weekly
Pay. work uniforms are among
Business and Bulldlngs ............................. 340
Living Facilities. Bonus.
Business Opportunlty.................. ,;, ............ 210
the many benefits. This posi·
Contact Us At 740· 266·
Business Tralnlng ..........................:............ 140
lion is open now and you
2950.
can begin work i,ll')mediately.
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
licensed Practical Nurse Apply by fax, email or you ·
· Cards of Thanks ........................................... 010
.l..l..eM} Overbrook center is may walk in.

Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
Electrlcai/Relrlgerat]on ...............................840
Equipment for Rent ..................................,..480
Excavating ...............................,................... 830
Farm Equipment .................,,.......................610
Farms lor Rent. ............................................430
Farms lor Sale ............................... :............. 330
For Lease ..................................;.................. 490
For Sate:....................................................... 585
For Sate or Trade ......................................... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 580
· Furnished Rooms ................. .-.........,............450
General Haullng ........................................... B50
Giveaway., .................................................... 040
Happy Ads ..............-...................................... 050
Hay &amp; Graln ............. :.............................. ,.....640
Help Wanted ....................-.............................110
Homelmprovements ....... ,........................... 810
: Homes lor Sale~ ....................\...................... 310
· Household Goods ....................................... 510
Houses lor Rent ....................................:..,.• 410
In Memorlam ..............................................:.ozo
Insurance ..................................................... 130
lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ......,................. &amp;&amp;O
. Llvestock...................................................... 630
· Lost and Found ....................-....................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ..,......................................... 350
· Mlscellaneous.................. ,...........................170
: Miscellaneous Metch.andlse ....................... 540
Mobile Home Repalr ........... ,........................ &amp;&amp;O
Mobile Homes lor Rent .............. :................ 420
Mobile Homes lor Sale................................ 320
Money to Loan .............................................. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheeters .......................... 740
· Musical Instruments ................................... 570
· Personata ..................................................... oos
: Peta ·tor Sale ................................................ 560
· Plumbing &amp; Heallng .................................... 820
Professional Servlces ................................. 230
Radio, TV l CB Repatr ............................... 160
Real Elllate Wantad ..................................... 360
Schools tnstructlon ....... ;.............................150
· Saad, Pr.nt &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
SttuaUona Wanted ....................................... 120
: Space tor Aent .........................~ ...........~ ....... 460.
· Sporting Gooda ........................................... 520
SUV'I for Salt ..............................................720
.Trucks lor Sale ............................................ 715
Upholttery ................................................... 870
Vans For Sale ...............................................730
Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Suppllea .................. 620
Wanted To Do .............................................. 180
Wanted to Rent ............................................470
Yard Sal., Galllpolls ....................................072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle .................. ;...... 074
Yard Sale· Pt. Pluunl. ............................... 076

HOMES
IURSALE

lwright@ic.net

CLASSIFIED INDEX

HOMEI PRO MENT
EDITION
• Hardware.
• Furniture
• Appliances
• Pdint
• Carpet
• -Electrical ·
• Construction
,• Wallpaper
• Plumbing
• BankS
• _Insurance
• And More ...

HOW ~ WRITE AN AQ

\\'\01 '\1 I \II \ I"'

r
2005

M&lt;rip County. OH

~~room
, 2 Bath',
2 Car
~arage, Above
Ground
Pool. Bidwell, OH .

·

Stocked. Pond. Code 914
r Call (740)388-(}410

Pomeroy
$275 00
plus Check out a · clean 2BA
$275.00 depos1t. (740)992- country setting with W/ D
hookup. No pets. $350/mo ..
6215 or {740}591-0195 .
.
. deposit. (740)256-1245.
2 bedroom house. Stove &amp; , - ' - - - - - - refrigerator included. No Cc;&gt;NVENIENTLY LOCAl·
pets. $275 month. ·$150 ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
deposit. Call (740)446·906~. Townhouse
apartments.
and/or small houses FOR
2/3 bedroom house in r AENT Call (7.40)441·1111
Middleport, carpeted, 1 car tor application &amp; information .
·
·
garage. (740)992-7501
Efficiency apt. $300 m0ntt1
3 bedroom Condo with river plus utilities No pets. Gall
view,
full
basement. · (740)446-4313.
Gallipolis Ferry. .$700 month.
For
Lea'se:
2
F loor.
Call (740)446·348 1.
Spactous.
l'otally
4 rooms and bath. 52 Olive Remodeled , 2 Bedroom. 1
St.' No pets, '$~ month 112 Baths. Unfurnished
Apartment
New Water
(740)446-3945.
Heater and Appliances
5 rooms · a·nd · bath in DowntoWn
Gallipolis.
Middleport. Gas heat , No Secunty and Key Deposit
pets, depoSit {740)742·2424 Required
No
Pets
or (740)992-3439
Aequ1red .
References
(740)446'6882 . M·F 8•00·
Nice Large 3br Home in
5:00.
Town. Upstairs Laundry 1Year Lease, $550Jmonth Furn~hed 2 &amp; 3 room apts.
plus Qaposit (304)675·4030 Clean. no pets. Referen£;e &amp;.
9·5
deposit
requ1red.
Cal l
(740)446·1519.

i

bedroom. 3 bath, 4 .5
eras. 2.5 car garage.
ackson . OH. Code 2255
r call (740)286-4750.

M~R~

1 Gradous liv1ng. 1 and 2·bed·
'room apartments at V1llage
2 br. mobile home city limits Manor
and
R1vers1de .
of Pt. Pleasant 30.4. 675 • Apartments m M1ddl~port
2359
From $295-$444 Call 7 40·
992·5064 Equal Housmg
3 bedroom mobile nome in Opportunities.
Middleport,
nci
pets Modern 1 bedroom apt. Call·
(740)992·585.'!
(740)446·0390.

..._

rM~S~~
l980 14x60 Nausha, 2 bedroom . remodel bathroom,
new porch roof. w/d, stove,
refrigerator.
$t:i.OOO.
(740)992-()925

Mobile Home on Private lot.
Spring Valley ~rea . Like
new· 3 bedroom, all electric.
2 bath, central air, relrigera.·
tor, stove. w/dryer hook up,
1982 Schultz 14x70. 2 br., 1 anached garage, water
bath. asking .$5000. 3Cf4- included . 2 miles from
675·6349
Holzer hosp11a1. $585. ref
and deposit req No pets
1993 14x70 Norris. 2 bed· Cal 614·763-05181614·208room. 2 bath, garden tub. :&gt;840.
dishwasher.

7

8;~~8

BUDGET

deck.

r

I

New 1 · bedroom apt. Call
1!40)446-3736.
Pilot Program- Renters
needed. Call (304)736-

3409.
Twin Rivers Tower is accept~
lng applications tor waiting
list tor Hud-subsized. 1· br ..
apartment. call 675-6679
EHO ·

:::·::.~ ~:::::. ~--·AP.-~~--im·
;x·r··-,. r
2

SPACE
FOR

RENT

w/central air. 1 and 2 bedroom apart· For Lease: Office or relail
$3,495.00. Call (740) 385- ments. furnished and untur· spaces 1n very good condt·

Dedroom.
4367

nished. security deposit
required. no pets. 740-992·
For Sale. 14:lt70.' 3 bed· 2218.
room, set ,up in . Country . - - - - - - - Homes. $6.995.00. Move in 1 bedroom apt. m Gallipolis.
today! Call {740)385-4367
Reference
&amp;
deposit
required . Call (740)446·
Home available tor lmmedi· 248S after 4pm .
ate occupancy! Already aet· 2 bedroom apartment. $275
· up on rented lot. 3 bedroom: per month p4u&amp; deposit plus
1 beth. 10% down, $209.00
utilities, 3rd StrHt, Racine.
Harol~ .
month,
Call
(740)247-4292
(740)385-994a.
2 bedroom apt. Second
Immediate possession! Only Ave .. GaiHpolis. $450 month.
S2'13.8S per mo. New 3 bed- stove/refrigerator . included.
room. 2 bath mobile home. washer/dryer hookup, cenOnly minutes rrom Athens. tral air. 740-441 ·0194 or
1-800-837·:3238
740--«1·1184.

'"---·-·

lion . Downtown Gallipolis
Approx. 1600 sq. It each . 1
or 2 baths. Lease pnce
tiegotiable to encourage
business
Call
new
(740)416-4425 or (740)4&lt;16-

r

3936

1 bedroom apt tor person in
a wheelchair. Call (7-4-0)3390798 or (740)446· 7637.

SHOP
CLASSIFIED$
I

�Monday, March 7, 2005
ALLEY COP

Warehouse
in Henderson, WV. Pre."
owned applicanes starting at
$75 &amp; up all under warranty,
we· do service work on all
Mak~ and Models (304)6757999
Brass bed, ftJII size. Good

. LPN-PH or Medical
Asst./Medical Receptionist
accepting
LPN-PH or
Medical

Receptionist.

or

Excellent

a · current

plan,

1.,.---iioiiiiiiiio-P

hospital

.I

t~l

r

salary,

..•

1 Capona·foe

thud
""-"-'''
so Nol home
8 lslel
53 Whodunit
1 t Gehrig and
name
54 Tenet
Gossen
13 ·Janltor's
55 Melric pound ~;J.?j
need
56 Patricia
of ·~ookia 's
14 Allen
4 Broad 111.

Storane

7
t Q ,J JO S
... Qltl6:1

Phone

,.34••..

wv

2520 Valley

(740) 992-5232
SxlO, lOx tO,
lOx 15, ]Ox20,
l0x30
Janet .JeO:ers

Drive

Pt. Pleasant,

WV 25550

304-675-4340
AA/EOE

·

www.pva

II

ey.org

-oiFOiiiTRiiiRilu~~~~-·_ ....r

L,F.15.
·

..,
1999 Chevy 1 ton with 11 ft .
ulillty bed. AC, cruise, tilt,
350 gas, 5 speed trans.,
69,000 miles. Excellent condition. Call (740)256·1526 or
(740)645·0446.

r

F~~~LE

·

99 Jeep Cherokee Sport,
4x4, EC, gold, auto. PW, PL,
2000 Chevrolet-Silverado V6 ,
CO,
CC,
new
1500 LS, fully-optioned , rotors/brakes ,
$5,995.
4 J; 4 ,be d li ner,trai le ring- (614)231·1355 .
pkg., Pewter ext .,Charcoal
int., 100k highway mites,
syn.oil,, below book $12,900.
:30.:4.:.·.:.77.:.3:.·:::606=2_ _ _ __
1ll93 Chevrolet Astra Van,
2000 S10.·LS, Ext-cab, 3rd . good
condition phone
door, 4-cyt, 5-spd. AC, CO, (304)675-5077
46,000
m1
A sk'•ng
'Ies.
$7,900.00 OBO (740)949- 2000 Ford WindStar LX.
262 1
·91 ,000 miles, 2 sliding
doors, power windows &amp;
2004 FORD F- 150 Lariat. cruise $6,300 (304)67510 ·QOOmi 4014
Super Crew,
2yr/20,000mi· warranty left, .::.:.:__ _ _ _ _ __
loaded /extras,
$30,000. 2000 Ford Wi ns tar LX, 81K,
(304)523·3500; (304)654· 2/sliding doors, seats 7, ail
9318; (304)886-1668.
.power, rear ,air, tinted win·
WD
_
Chevy
·ton,
aSking
$6,600,
87
112
2
350 ctows,
engine. 81 .ooo-mnes, good (
) " ~
condition, PW!PL, orlg. 4 2002 Chevrolet Customjzed
new
tires.
Red/black. Regular
Van
(Archer
Express) 20,000 miles plus,
$4,700. (740)506-1367.
e~&lt;cellent condition has T.V.,

SUVs

F'OR SALE

tape player. and radio in rear
sec1lon of van, also In front
dash. Speaker phOnes in

BISSELL
New.Homes • Vin yl
Siding • New Garages

• Repl ace menl

39728 SRI43

Pomeroy, OH

Windows ~ Rooting

740-992-9922

COMMERCIAL and
RES IDENTIAL

\\, · '' ·I, . 'II h" .II h '

i !•

'I il ,\ Ill

FREE ESTIMATES

•II h

11"1' &gt;~&gt;illl1,· 1 11II&lt; ,
.11111 I,., d ll I, 1'1"ih 1

740-992-7599

I

2004 Harley Davidson 883
custom. black, 4,500 miles.
$7,500. (740}441 -1583.

2001 Li ncoln Navigator.
AWO, 5.4 V8, 3rd row seat·
ing, cassette/CO-ch8nger,
heated/cooled-seats, low
miles, excellent condi1ion,
$23,900.(740)453-5535.
2002 Chevy Avalanche Z71 .
Fully loaded, onstar, heated
seats, 29 ,000 miles, moonroof, 4-wheel·dri\/e , co.
$23,400 OBO. (614)9896448.

'.:..:::!::::::.:::::::.____

I

Let me do 1t for youl

Sunset Home
Construction

COMP IF YOU G~T ·~ f

•

tilT ON Ttl~ ti~Al&gt;
AT WO~IC.

••

•BARNEY
TH' WA'f I F&gt;GGER IT,
LUKE'(, \.YE AIN'T
SHIF'LESS, WE'RE
JEST SELF-

EMPLOYED,

Ma c hin e Quilting

&amp; quality

, I

• •

New shipment of

•THE BORN LOSER

100% Cotton

References

.

Material ... Patriotic

Available

&amp; Quilters Prints
Hrs.: 1\Jes-Salll-5
Sunday &amp; Monday

Free Estimates
· Call Gary Stanley

746-742-2293

17"\'&gt;RUTIJ~,

...,

DO '(0\J "\l\1!-IK YOU'LL

PTI-\EN 5101? lt{\1(.000(11'\6 II'£ ...

I

t.IJf.l?. f&lt;\AAK'{
.I'G~N?

ri'r'fh-

Closed

BoAn;FO'R&amp;SMALE!J!URS I'' .~~""'~""'~~..

f&gt;..'::&gt; YO~ fiR~\

WI FE.

1

~

•

.
~

88 Ford Econoline Van. conc;:l., garage k6pt, price
new $24.000 sell $15,700.
5500 OBO, 17401992. 3457
call Troy Krebs 304-675-

F414tJ:ci~ I~~~~~]

02 Honda 400 EX. Excellertt
con dition, rode little. $3.000
neg. can {740)256- 1526 or 1977 Airstream · 30 ft.
Excellent condition, $2,000.
(740)645.Q446.
Day
(740)446·6865,
1979 Honda 750 1Olh Evening (740)379-2923.
Annivers8ry Limited Edition.
1998 30' fifth wheel travel
Needs . ignition
work.
trailer,
double slide, e~cel·
Evening
(740)256·6870.
lent co ndition, $13,900
Low. mileage, 52 ,000 .
p~ one: (740)696·9319
1982 Honda 500 Trike
2001 Hornet Bunkhouse 32',
Faring w/stereo system. Ok 12' expanQo, sleeps 10,
blue. E\lenings (740 )256- excellent condition. $16,800.
67:..:0:..:·.:$3::·::
000
:6.:
::::.·----- (740)441·1501 .
1986 Honda 250R, orglnal
' I I~\ It I .._
plastic, runs good $3,000.

~-10

2004 Ford Expedition 4x4
XLT. Power w/d. seat cruise,
air, AM/FM, cassette, co,
lilt, 5.4L, Triton, V8, tow pkg.
Red &amp; grey color, 35 ·000

_-30
.:.4.:·6=62:.·2::9=2.:.4- - - _ _ _: OME
_ _ _. ,
1986 Honda Foreman, 4 wd,
IMPRoVF.:ME:NTI
excellenl condition, garage
kept. $2000, (740)992-041 3
BASEMENT
1995 Harley Softait Custom,
WATERPROOFING
miles. EI&lt;Cellent condition, $9,995. Call (606)232-6319. Unconditional lifetime guar$25,500. (740)245·9162.
antee. Local relerences fur1996 Honda Goldwing 1500 nis.hed . Established 1975.
2004 Honda Pilot EX, rated Aspecade. 23 ,700 mil es,
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446bes1 f\1 11-slze SUV. Red Pearl e~&lt;cellentcondi tion, 2 match0870, Rogers Basement
1
ext. 8fl cloth int., all options, lng helmets. Asking $8,000 .
Waterproofing.
maintained and babied , 21k
miles $26 ,900 . 30 ~_ 773 _ ~(7:,:40~)388::::·::6:04::7:.:·-..,..-..,.. - - - - - - - - 6062
1998 · Yamaha
Warrier .
Culverts
Excellent coridition, $2,600 .·
99 Jeep Grand Cherokee 4-wheele.r tires· various plastic and metal, 6" inches·
L redo Lo dod 6 c l'nder
·
a
· a
•
Y1
• sizes
and
conditions . 60 inches in stock: . Ron
excellent condition , · 97,000 1740)o44S-D04S.
Evans Ent9rprise. Jackson.
miles,
$7,900' · OBO. :.:..c::.c.:.:..:..::.:.::..:_ _ _ OH 1(600)537·9526
(740)592·2946.
t999 Honda Shadow750cc. ~-~=,:,.,====-.,
6,200 mikls, excellenl condi·
44
lion, $4,000 .. CaR (740)446·
"ORXSAU

==-------

i

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

L.,--~r,;::;·~---,.1
: : · Harley Davidson
86 Bronco XLT, 4 WD, 302, 4
Sportster 883 Hugger, 6.350
BBL. auto, new tires, roters,
miles,
new tires, extras ,
$1,100, !740)992·3679
$6,500 Neg. Day: (740)645·
3248, evening after 7pm
74012
(
56-6589.
2003 Suzuki VInson 500, 4·
wheeler, 340 miles, Red 4
wo. $4800.
304·675·
2790

oeo

All Your Home

~

•

lmprovcm~nt Needs

• Siding • Windows

• Carpom • Garage~

BIG NATE

• Room Add. • Mini

Barns
.• Kitchens • Baths
··No Job To Smail"

" GObD GRAVY"

14 yrs. Experiem;e

St. Rt.681 Darwin , OH

Beech Street

Middleport, OH

10x10x10x20
992-1194
or 992-6615
"Middleport's only
Self-Stora1e"

ROBERT
BISSEll

740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553

Restocking l.n te

PEANUTS

!~blel
~ rls

and After Mo rl&lt;et

OUR FAMILY IS GOING AWAY
FOR A FEW DAYS ...

See Brent or Brian Wh aley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sat. 8:30· Noon
Sun. Closed

l WAS WONDERIN6 IF

.'(Ql)'D TAKE CARE OF M'i
DOG WHILE WE'RE GONE .

Advertise
in this
space for $1 04
per month.
'•

CONmUCTIOIII
·New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

740-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

SUNSHINE CLUB
1).11; RE.' S A

Nt.W S1l!W

wr .

A Fj;LlJ /'I'CJRf. Nf:W )TUDI'-S
AND W~LL B~ f31'&gt;(.K 1'0

PL..r.AS(;. (
NO N\()1(!.
S1UDIE.S

LEWIGS AND BLCOD·u..TTIOO

\

ment.
ESTATE . NO. 25806·
Ninth Accounl of
Mary Ann Harrta,
Guotdlan of lhe per·
son end eat•te of
Timothy
EugMa
Herrle, a minor.
Unl. .a ••cepllona

·--------------------~ ~----

-

~

~~
YOU "fHINK l'M
PREITY 5"fUPIP,
DON'"f YOU? .

252 Upper River Road • Gallipolis
740-446-0842 • 949-115S Evenings

4

1i

"~

NORRIS NORTHUP DODGE
are filed !hereto, sold
account wltl be setfor
hearing before aald
Court on lhe 7th doy
of April, 2005 , al
which • tlmi
aald
account will be con·
aldered and contlnued from day to day
unlll llnally disposed
of.
Any peraon lnler· ·
aattld may file written
exception lo sold
account or to manera
par181nlng lo lhll exocutlon ol the truat, not
laaa than five daya
prlot to the dale ael
for hearing.
J. S. Powell
Judge
Common Pleas Court,
Probate Dlvlalon
Meigs County, Ohio
(3) 7

1

Whaley's Auto
Parts

MANlEY'S .
SElf STOIIGE
97

WAS T HE
T I P-OFF

IMPORTS
Athens

740-247-2162 or'
740-416-3508

Hilr s Se lf
Storage

ADVERTISE

29670 Bashan Road
Racine , Ohio
4 5771

IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH

Ii

-

740·949·2217

. GRIZZWELLS

Now Available.At

B.\l ll\1 Ll!\IBER
Scorpion Tractors

1~._..._,.

'

'

PICTURE
THIS!!
Profrssional Pholography
&amp; Vid~ra ph }"
Any occa.~l nn -Porlrai l

S«!i!ilons, Weddin~~:s.

fa miiiM, Enpgements,
Babies
Call la n Carpe nter
740·742-.1216

"Taking The Sli11g Out Of
Hard Work!"
Mid-S ize 4Wheel Drive Tractor
w ith 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124

---t-"""c_ .... _

Chester

West

~orth

Pa ss
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass '

2 '2 NT
3 NT
4•

fi •

3!

li:asl
Pa ss

32

Pass

34

Pass
Pass
All pass

35
36
37

Opening l ead : t Q

39
40
4!
42

985-330 I

"W, ~'"to

~----_,

YoU U\\1&lt;

Bridge players inter distributions and th~
locations of key ca rds from the bidding
and plaY. Probably the most e~&lt;pensive
missed inference at last year's World
Open Team Olymp1ad occurred on the
last deal of the quarterlinal match
between Hungary and Russia. Hungary ·
needed fo avoid a major adverse swing
to advance.
. ·
The Russian North-South pair bid and
made six no-trump. So, the HtJilgarians
had to stJcceed in a slam, In thei.r ~ uctio n ,
whi ch is given, fl North had pas sed out
six hearts or retreated to six no-trump, all
would have been well fo r Hungary, but he
kept Russian hopes alive by opting for six
spades.
West led the· diamond queen, and the
declarer, Miklos Oumbovich, spent a long
t1me deciding which way to turn.
Eventuall y, he took Irick one on th e board
with the diamond ace and ran lhe spade
jack to West's queen . Back came the diamond jack. Now. if Soult1 had played a
sp~;tde to dummy's 10, pitched his last
diamond on the club ace, crossed to
hand with a heart, drawn the misSing
trumps, and relied on 3-3 hearts,
Hungary wOuld have won. But declarer
cashed two top ·hearts and ruffed a heart
with dummy's spade 10. Now East had to
get a' trum p trick, so Ru ssia nioved into
the semis. What inference · did
Dumbovich miss?
If hearts were 4-2 and spades 3-3 , West
would have rellJrned a: trurnp at tri ck
three, not a diamond. He would have
anticipated declarer's need to ruH a heart
' on th e board and would ha\le removed

G

• Decks • Porches

Rac ine. OH

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: North-South

r----y,.,.N

grad
24 Throng
25 Rock star 1

dog
Lobster
eaters' wear
Pssll
-voyage!
Gets tanned
Tel"pt .
Solftude

say

42 Long·

legged
wader
Track event
TV award
FrlngeLoud noiae
Chip in
Polleeblotter Info
Sense
of humor
Brewery
product

43

44

26 Senor's

son
27 Rackets
{relax)
28 Cold·
6 Gaze al
shoulder
7 Mach 3 Iller 29 Bunch
8 Havana 's
of sheep
place
31 Stickers
9 Off in lhe
33 Bleachers
enjoyers
distance
shout
Ms. Ronstadt I 0 Anliquily
35 Oeep water
NATO cousin 12 Willowy
36 Rock plenl
Twilch
19 Brlllorlval
38. - de plume
Foolnole
20 Hoover's
39 Sprawl
word
org .
.
41 Shop for

46
47

48
50
51

52

by Luis Campos

WHY ARE &amp;,IOU
LOOKING. AT ME
l-lKE "fHAT?

.

Geleblll)• C1pher ~rams are crea1ed from qootallons by famous people

Each letter in the cipher stards lot o.O()!Ilef

past a'lj presen1

Todsy's Clue. Yequars B

" K'JL

VCE

(VLCHR) ,

N SL
DNNE

PC 8 N H

DNH

LCGV

, XHNOT ."

DNHPLH

GNCGV

HKGA
PREVIOUS SOLUTION- ' The two mosl imponant lhings in·aC1ing are a
child's imagination and a Sense of truth." - Spencer Tracy

Astro.Graph

(C)2005 by NEA, lnc. 3·5

.

~~~i:t:~y

-... 'llirthdlly:

S© ~~~nA- ~ t. ~ss

- - - - - ' - - - Edittd by CLAY

Tuesday, March 8, 2005
By Bernice Bede Oaol
The year ahead will prove that 1the
efforts you expended in the past were
not in vain . The months ahead ara
like ly to produce situations fro":! which
yo u can reap rewards tor lab ors
whera you have already paid your
dues.
PISCES (Feb. 20-M arch 20) - Oon"t
cava in prematurely today if things are
looking to be at their darkest.
because dawn is breaking end it will
bring with it opportunities to achieve
many Important, powerful objectives.
ARIFS (Ma rch 2 1-Aprt t 19)- No one
ia so wise that she or he can't learn
from others. Today you'll innately be
aware of this tact and be receptive to
what others have to say. YoU'll learn
something valuable in the process.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Strive
to be flexible today and play thing s as
they come. When you flow with the
tide of events. you'll have a far easier
time of being able to achieve your
most important goats.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)- A situa tion could develop today which would
put you in a position to take advantage of others. but you' ll find your
sense of fair play won't let you be so ,
unfair and you'll do the righ t thing.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) If
things hava not been going your way
lately, there Is no reason why you
should continue to accept conditions
as they now exist Do something
about things and make changes . for
th e better.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Mqk~ your ·
needs known. today and you'll see
how quickly people you know socially
wtlt jump in to help. Talk 'to those who
you consk:ter good fr iends, because
th ey'll be there for you.
V IRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) - This Is a
better than average day to catch up
on all those projects )tou·ve been
sidestepping tor tar too long . Nothing
will prove too. tough it you're determined to· slay with them all the way.
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0c1. 23} - Because
of the &amp;J~:celtent organizational abill·
ties you d isplay today. you might be ·
called upon to piece together a situation that" needs mending that others
have been unable to handle .
SCORPIO (Oct . 24 -Nov. 22) Instead of spending all your lime
to~ay doing yo~r own thing tor personal gain, you 'll unsellishty work
hard lor others to se&amp; that they fare
just as well ~s you would wish tor
yoursell.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) No one Is bener at telling it like i1 is
than you, and today just may be one
ol those limes. You won't hesitate to
say what needs saying without being
phony.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-.Jan . 19) Today could offer an interesting financial advantage for you . You· might be
able to reap a very large return
through an unusual chain of circ umstances it .YOu're a lert enough to rec·
ognize it.
·
AQUARIUS -(Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Dare
to be a dreamer lodey, but continUe 19
vieW thlngt~ reattstically as well. When
you can anticipate the obstacles In
Advance . obs tacles won't obstruct
your hopes.

R~torrc nofl Jene:rs of
O lour
scrambled wtn~s

WOI~

GAM I

POlLA-N

.the
b~­

low 10 form leur simple word3 .

I

LATHEC

·I

I• I' I'

GN E T I

1

I

.l~...
~

had

a

Someone
given · me
fool prooi schemll to make

money . Granny told med that
.
.
•
.
whenever things soun
too
~---------,easy . it
ou: there's a part

turns
VA .NEDT
l you--·: ..... .
~-~~ .:7_:;1;.:.:..:..,:18;:..::;1__;_1"9~·-; G) CC'Mclere 1he ch vd: le Quoted.
_
.
_
b ~ iillin9 in the m i~ s i ng words
I
L_j__L..I.-J_-L..J you d~ •"= lc:J ~t:::11 sr~;; No 3 beio,....

. . ., .....
B lo t ~h

-· Grie7 .... F n ~ -

\'Ni l\" -

~

.:

FIFTV

.

·· Wh(l~ a ~ldin ge cow:.rty we live 1n . :;ays !11~ cvm1c.

We on ly h ~ve twa oho:ces p: c'
i or orestdent, but
1n a beauly pagean: we can cho0se !roc FIFTY 1"

to

frorr

ARLO &amp; JANIS

1 UIVt COIIIOO

TOM. LAWIJ AOO
CMROCIJ 5T~E T~l~
lill{. Of YEJ..~!

SOUP TO NUTZ

WA\'\tiA\~
';&gt;

1 Classes
2 Muddy the
waters
3 Chop 4 Japanese
canine
5 - out

clolheo
(2 wds.)

CELEBRITY CIPHER

dummy's last trump.

GARFIELD

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT, PRO·
BATE
DIVISION
MEIGS
COUNTV,
OHIO
IN THE MATIER OF
SETILEMENT
OF
ACCOUNTS,
PROBATE COURT MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
Account~ 111d vouche,. of the lollowtng
named fiduciary hM
been Iliad In , the
PIObete Court, Meigs
CouniJ, Ohio lor
approval and Hille-

;

MILL END
FABRICS

work
• Affordable Rates

94 Harley Davidson Ultra
Classic, 10,000 miles, blue,
excellen t condition, $13,500,
(7.40)949-22 17

i

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING&amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING

K 7 4

22 Pata on
~3 Annapolis

m
""G~T f~OM WO~ICf:ltS' ~~(

.•

Brian Reeves
New Home Construction, Remodeling,
Renovations, Decks. Garages, Pole ·
Buildings, Roofs, Siding, ·Windows &amp; All
Other Residenl ial Needs
Phone: 740-742-34ll
for a ffl!e estimat~.

• Prompt

2005 Kawasaki V·Twin 750
Vulcan
Cycle.
never
dropped , garaged, 50mpg.
$4,400 (304)675-2942

-,

2001 GMC Jimmy _SLE, CD
player, all poWer, 4x4, great
cond. 304·773·51n or 304·
593·38t9

Ta~e the PAIN

out of PAINTING!

1995 Jeep Cherokee Sport, rear, one owner. Never been 2002 Stingray 20 ft . open
4.0 automatic, air, excellent wrecked. To view ph one bow. RedJ While, 5.0 liter Vcond. $3495.00 304-727· (740)446-9539.
e. Hustler trailer, excellent
6924.

/

...,,.._ _ _ _ _ __,

r40
M'
~~I
. 4 Wuro!IEEURSRL'Yu...,

. socialite
24 After-dlnner
candy
27 Sweet roll
30 COmlc-slrlp

The inference
WtiAT'S A 't,VMP
. .· $VM 5~TTL~M~NT'?" §~ can be key
~~
TtiAT'5 WtiAT YOU

BUILDERS InC.

•

"MISTf:~ rue~.

WVOJ&lt;;n5

choose a /a.~ting

ll 52
R ::!
.1 r~ 4 2

t

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

/

Pomeroy, Ohio

one 's memory.
\1 IHT
\IO'l \IL'I'I
( 0\11'\"

740 669 565

r

992-62!5

tribute to your loved

L,r•._.:.F•o~.~=-_.Jr

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

Pomeroy, Ohio
25 Veara Local Ea rtence

==u:t:u:s:h:el:p:y:o:u~

. 2001 Jeep Cherokee Sport
4x4 power windows &amp; locks,
CO ,towing package 54,000
miles 304·675-1314

••

Tree Service

V.C. YOUNG Ill

33795 Hiland Road

~;::======::;::;;===::==~

.......- - - - - - - . ;

JONES'

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Pklmblng
• Roofing I Gutters
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch O.cks
We do It all e~&lt;cept
furnace work

9 7 6 2

•

·-

,+

740-667-0700 1-888-HUPP234

CARPENTER
SERYICE

•

Suuth
• A K 8 a 'I
1 • AKQ&lt;J

Rollovers • Major Med •

'

spacecraft
Fortune"
15 Ukralne clly 57 Bashful
16 " - 58 - - fool
Around''
pole
17 Keep out
59 Roadie's
18 Most foxy
gear
20 Ticket price
21 MaunaDOWN
22 Rookie

A 9 6 2

:l

Medicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident

YOUNG'S

,..

c/o Human Resources

'l

u:1 07·05

¥ J I0

South

High and Dry

long

Pleasani Valley Hospital

L..--iliiiiiiliiiiiiiio-.,1

miles. Excellent condition, 5
1ll92 t:lontlac Bonn~ille SE, speed, overdriw . (740)388excellent condition, maroon, ~0-14_o_ __,,------new tires. runs good, 1992 Ford F150 XLT 4 x4
103,000 miles, $2,995,
shortbed 110,000 miles 5
(740)742-3802
speed, overdri\le call 304"1994 Mercedes 220. Good 682·2924 $4,500.
condition , $6,800. Call
t995 Ford F-150 XLT, 8 ft .
(7 40)245·9068 .
bed, excellent condition,'
1994 Mitsubishi 3000 GT, Askin9 $6,600 080. Call
new transmission, CD play- . (740)992-1m.
er, great cood. "304· 773Block, brick, sewer pipes, 5.1n or 304-593-3619.
2002 Chevy 1500, VB,
windows, lintels, etc. Claude
29,080 miles, 5spd, PSIPB,
.Winters, Rio Grande. OH ' 93 BuiCk $1900, 304·576· AC, tilt/cruise. CO, $12,000.
. Call 740-245·512 1.
2383
Recon 1me. (304)634·5131.

health

MONTY

Goboc:k~

45

49 Comlc-book

o4o AK937
F. a !It

We st

. 45783

• IRA • 401 K

1-888-321-0311
740-682-6188

Send resumes to :

Auros

For Sale Craftmatic bed
Income·Tax Spec ill a
/vibrator, commerical pool$5001 Honda's, Chevy's,
table, Gazelle exerciser 30496
Che\ly
Corsica
Jeep's,
Ect.
PoUce
675-4575
$2,800.00: 96 - Ply. Neon 4
Impounds! Cars from $500
Or. · $2 ,700.00 : 93 Buick
for listi ngs 800-391-5227
Regal 2 Or. $2,700.00: 94
JET
EXT 3901
Park
Avenue
· Buick
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In - - - - - - - - - S2,600.00 : 97 Chevy Malibu
Plymouth 4dr. engine S2,900.00:
95 Pontiac
Stock. Call Ron Eva ns,. 1· 1952
runs good, body excell. , all
orginal, no r'ust 32 ,000 miles Su nlire GT $2,950 .00: 96
800-537-9528.
304·576-2532
Pontiac Sunfire $3,800.00:
Chevy
Corsica
95
Ford XL Galaxy 390 $1,200 .00: Several more
1969
NEW AND USED STEEL
'
'
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar automatic, power steering cars and trucks. Riverview
and
"
brakeS,
AC,
Interior
Motors, 2 blocks up past
For
Coocrete, . Angle ,
excellent.
Mechanical
excelMcOonalds in PomerO'j. Call
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains. lent, body good. Needs (740)992~34-90
Driveways &amp;. W81kways. L&amp;( mlnor repair and palnl. Jeep Grand Cherokee 00
Scrap Metals Open· Monday, $3,300.00 0.80. (740)696- Laredo, SSK miles. Excellent
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;. 1373. (740)591-5868.
condilion, 4x4, remote start,
Friday. Bam-4:30pm. Closed 1961 Olds 98, 4dr, Runs extras.
$13,000neg.
Thursctay,
Sa1Urday
&amp;
Good, Call (304)675·1264
(304)617·1 380,
Sunday. (74p)446-7300
1989 Crown Vic, new tires, Must sate, 1984 CorveHe,
new
battery, new 1rans. Very 350 engine. (740)992-6797
Pole Barn 30x50x10FT
nice
car. 101,000 miles . Fl5 ·. TRUCKS
$6795. includes Painted
$2,200.00 OBO. (740)992·
Metal, Plans. instruction
5532
FOR SALE
Book, SUder, Free Oell\lery
(937)559·6385
1990 Ford ThtJnderbird 1988 Ford F150, 79,300

holidays,

#7

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement

Ask for Art

area,

life insurance, vacation,

FOR SI\LE

$700. 304-675·4949

related

term disability, and retireroent.

t.,._..,;EQu-ii!PMENiilliilirriioo_.l

r

SPA FACTORY OIJTLFIS
· New Shipment
20-tubs in-Stock
Cedar Knoll Mall,
Kentucky Trading Post,
Ashland. •
1606)922·7165

license.

SR

Tuppers Plains, OH

... ~ :

Buyers of standing tim1be1· &lt;;
Also Land Clearing

Applicants

WV

41800

+

insurance single/family plan, dental

I

10

Assistant/

working with direct patient care.

FoR SA.L£

...,.--~-----,
warm Morning wood heater. ~16
. AUT~
E~cellen"t condition . $250.00.
FOR SALE
Call: (740)985-3929
1999 Ford Contour SE· 4
door, 24,300 miles, excellent
condition, ·$5,500. . Call
, ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ (740)446-077 1 after 6pm.
r10
FARM
2000 Chrysler Cirrus 4·door

r

full-time

One-year experience in a physicians ,
office

: : ~: ~: ,5-o _._c_al-1

(740)446·4782.

for .a

Medical

must liave

Earl Fields
and family

sedan, automatic power
~
seats. windows. door-locks,
John Deere 2040, diese l, Silver excell. cond. 63,000
·Mollohan Carpet. 202 Clark
EC. neW tires: $8,950. Ford
Ch!ipel Road , ~rter, Ohio.
3000
diesel,
$5,995. miles $6000, 304·675·B047
(7 40)446·7 444 1-877-830(614)4t9·2761 .
2000 Chrysler LXI Town and
9162. Free Est1mates, EasY
financing, 90 ctays 'same as Specials of the Month on
Country. All leathe r, 66,000
cash . Visa/ Master Card, Farmpro Trac tors. Farmpro miles, excellent condition,
Drive· a- little save alot
20hp, 2-wheel drive, diesel
-(-7-40- 12_4_5·
utility
tractor, $3899.
Thompsons ARPiiance &amp;
2000 Kia Sepllia 4-door,
Aepair-675·7388. For sale, Farmpro 25!lp 4-wheel
drive,
diesel
utility
tractor
automa1ic,
\lery easy on gas,
re-conditioned automatic
$8999.
More
70,000
miles,
runs like new,
w/loader,
washers &amp; dryers, refrigerapurple in color. $3,800 or
tors, gas and electric units available, all with I yr
be~! offer. {740)44 1-9378.
ranges, air conditiOners, and warranty, cal l for more
2001 Honda Civic . LX
wringer washers. Will do details. (740)696-0358
.repair's on major brands in Tractor parts &amp; service, spe- "Coupe: Green , automatic·.
shop or at your·home.
cia lizing
m
Massey eKcellent condition. yery
• Used Furniture Store: 130 Ferguson , Ford, Long, and clean, 73,000 highwaymiles, $8,395 negotiable
Bulaville Pike. Appliances, Belarus. (740)69~·0356
(614)313-7096.
mattresses,
dressers,
LIVEmJCK . · 2002 Foret Escort ZX2, 5
couches, dinelles, recliners,
speed. 29.000 miles, air,
grave monuments. much
more
(740)446-4782,
one owner. Nice (740)441 ·
Gallipolis, OH, Hrs 11-3 (M· 1 Quarter horse mare, 4 yrs 0157 or (740)645-5 141 .
aieL Green broke , $400.
S) We buy used furnitu r~ .
(740)256-1652.
2002 Pontiac Grand AM SE.
Red," AJC, CD, loadecl. 56k.
ANTIQIJES
4-H Pigs for Sale
miles,
Euro
taillights,
Begin fanowtng 1120/05 and · chrome accents, $8,995.
·still farrowing. Pure bred Excellent condition. Call
Buy or sell. Riverine
Yorks and crossbreds. (740)256·8816..
Antiques, 1124 East Main
Please call (740)448-2002
on SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740- or
(74 o) 541 •7491
or 2003 Dodge Neon STX
992-2-526 . Russ Moore, (740 )541 _7470
4door, 4cyl. , automatic,
owner.
•
power ~veryth i n g; 11,000
Yearling .Angus Bulls, Mostly miles, $6:500. (740)441·
A..L excellent bloodlines, 0337 or (740)645·6153.
priced reasonably. Slate Run
Pontiac
Sunfire
Farm, Jackson. (740)286- 2003
approx. 20,000 .miles $7900.
1992 Dodge Stealth , 24 5395.
valve turbo, $4,000.
(304)458-1881
www.slaleruntarm.com
Early 90's Gehl loader,
HAY &amp;
98 Cadillac Calera. Fully
$1 0,500.
equipped, leather interior,
J. black Angus Bulls, $2 ,000 L---liGiiRAINiii--.,1 low
miles, ·mint condition,
each.
$7,900.
Call (740)704-315 1.
2001- Cargomale cargo traJI· 1000# bales, $7.00-$10.00
eMw
Z3, '99, Special
er, $8 ,500. (740)256-9247 or· &amp; $15.00, pick up · loact or
(740)645.()670.
good
hey, Edition, 22,000 miles, dark
green, $19,999. (304)4 12For rent- 24'x32' 3 stall Pole
3380
Barn. Private. AI. 7. $200/
monlh.
Gallipolis.

resumes

North
• J 10
• 9 6

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services

S®~~®ll' L®t~~~~
~ t~~~~Q~~

Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently

:...:._::__---:'-cc:-:- · · _ __.

r·

ACROSS

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

who passed away
January 8, 2005,
would like to thank
everyone fo r the
food, flowers ,
prayers, kind words
arid acts of kindne:ss.l
Your expressions of
sympathy will
always be
remembered.

Male Pek:ingese puppies, 7
weeks old, 1st shots. CKC
Registered. Call {614)4714766.
Purebred Border Come
pups. lmport8(1 bloodlines.
1st shots/wormed. Classic
cofors. $100 · each .. Call
(740)379·91 10.

Furniture : Sofa- chair sets, &amp; wormed. $500, POP.
$399: Sola- love seat sets , (740)473-2785. {740)236$499. Mollohan Carpet 002
,;,;..6;.________,

Kenmore
washer. · · $95 ;
Whirlpool dryer, $95; GE
electric
range,
$95 ;
Whirlpool refrigerator, $150;
Like new Whirlpool dryer,
$250; Like new Magic Chet
washer, $250: Octagon end
tables . $15 . each : Tappan
gas range, $175.
Skaggs Appliances '
76 Vine Stree t ·
(740)446·7396

NEA Crossword Puzzle

Phillip
Alder

Maxine
JuhlingFields,

Full blooded Boxer, loves
kids, no papers. askin111
$175, (740)992·3457

i0

----

The
family of

condition. Pretty new mal- S!leltie pups: 2M/2F, AKC,
tress(740)44 1-0540.
Born 12/31, Vel Chk'd, shots

(740)446·7444 or (740)368·
0173.

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

BRIDGE

Dachshund puppjes. AKC
1st shots, 1st worming ,
$350. Call (740)446·4446 .
Appliance

www.mydailysentinel.com

lir&lt; HUMaN C818:11Y 1b
T - llND ""~!SON IS
'WMei S£~~5 U9
F~ li-£ ANIMa\.S ...

T...: ~ 1100S£""-D
DoG , !i:&gt;R

IN!!IliNCE , Vl&lt;lo;S

US 6S LE1Jt&gt;Elal OF 1&lt;£

'Eto.cK' Dllf. To 001'. SllltRtoR
~uruo

...

I'll£, WE'RE" NoT
i'IFRIIID oF lHE
~ac O&lt;lM

CLEaNER!,

�Page 86 • ~ Daily Sentinel

Monday, March 7, 2005 ..

www .mydailysentinetcom ·

Smith named Ohio State AD Woods beats ·Mickelson
million budget at Arizona
Stale.
Associated Press
Before going 10 Arizona
State, Smith was AD at Iowa
COLUMBUS
SOhio State and Eastern Michi gan.
State introduced Gene mith
Smith, who had an overall
as its new athletic director salary at Arizona State of
Saturday, giving the forme, about $370,000, agreed to a
Anzona State AD a hefty seven-year contract with Ohio
salary to take charge. of a State staning April 15 that
depanment betng mvesllgated · will pay him up 10 $625,000
by the NCAA about 1mproper annually if he meets performance goals and makes it to
benefits gtve!l to athletes.
Smtth, athleuc dtrector ·at the end of the contract.
Arizona State since 2000, will
Smith's base pay will be
replace Andy Geiger, who $450.000, com pared with
said he is retiring because he $250,000 that Geiger made
is burned out.
annually. University president
Smith said he understands Karen Holbrook earned
what he's getting into and the $437,000· last year; football
school's recent problems coach Jim Tressel's pay tops
aren 't indicative of its overall $ 1.2 million per year.
character.
Smith inherits an Ohio State
"These issues are single program that has been
issues in a small situation. It's wracked by ·controversy for
not something that will dam- most of_ the past two years.
age the integrity and the long '!'hree of 1ts b1ggest sports term health of the institution football and men's and
or the athletic program." he women 's basketball - are
said Saturday at an introduc- bemg mvest1gateil . by the
tory news conference.
NCAA ·amid allegations of
The 49-year-old Cleveland violations including academic
native will be the tirst black fraud by players. payments
athletic director in Ohio from boosters and no-show
S,tate's history. The school's summer jobs..
athletic department has an
Former Oh10 State football
operating budget of more than standout Maunce Clarett has
$80 million and oversees 36 alleged that Tresse l helped
varsity sports. That compares line .him and other players up
with the 22 teams and $35 w1th loaner cars. Claret! has
BY JONATHAN DREW

.

also ~harged that football
players were placed in easy
courses and received high pay
for minimal work in the summer.
In
December, Geiger
announced the school was
banning its basketball team
from playing in the NCAA or
NIT tournaments this season
as a way of mitigating expected sanctions from the NCAA.
Former coach Jim .O'Brien
acknowledged ·he loaned
$6,000 to the family of a
recruit in 1999 and was tired
in June.
Smith said he feels the
school 's reputation has survived.
"Keep in mind that outside
of Columbus, the Ohio Stale
University is still thought of
in a ~ reat way," he said.
Anzona State 's graduation
rate improved to school highs
under Sniith. But in a report
released last ,week, the NCAA
rated the program 's overall
academics below the cutoff
point for acceptable perfor'mance .
Ohio State's program got
slightly higher overall marks
. from the NCAA in it s
Academic Progress Ratings.
The Buckey!!s' football team .
was ranked II th-worst in the
country, a little bit lower than
Arizona State's.

'

The lllini led 64-58 after tipped out of bounds in front
James Augustine's layup with of the Illinois bench. The
3:23 left - but didn' t score lllini had one last chance
with 2.2 seconds left.
again. .
.
Page B1
The Buckeyes ran off the William s passed to Powell ,
next seven points, with Dials, but his hurried 3-pointer from
set a pick and rolled to the who had 21 points, scoring the top of the circle was well
basket and guard Tony on a half-hook before short and off the mark ..
Stockman.',was used as a Sylvester drove the lane for a
Fans rushed· the court after
decoy. The lllini bit on the . left-handed .scoop to cut the the buzzer soimded, snapping
deception ..
lead to 64-62 with · I :40 photos, jumping up and down
"As we left the huddle, remmmng.
and. slapping the Buckeyes on
Matt said, 'I' II make the
·
'They · were . loosey- ·the back.
shot,'" Matta said. "And he goosey," Weber said of the
Dee
Brown
led
the
lllini
,tlid."
Buckeyes. "They didn 't quit. with IJ points, although he
Ohio State ( 19- 12, 8-8); a They 're an NCAA tourna- was rattled all day by chants
team with problems all year ment team. Playing on their of "air ball" after several
hanging onto the ball, didn't home court, they made the errant second-half shots. He
have a turnover in the·second plays."
was 3-of-11 from the field
.
half. The lllini, who had hurWith just over a minute and had only five points over
dled tough games in loud left, Illinois' Deron Williams the final 34 minutes . Powell
environments all season, had drove the ·lane and wrapped a and Head each added 12
seven turnovers after half- pass around a defender to points.
time.
Williams, who came in
Roger Powell , but Dial s
"We didn't take care of the swatted the shot away to averaging 12.8 points a
ball and they made all the teammate Je' Kel Foster. . game, was 1-of-7 from the
plays at the end," Illinois Sylvester missed a 15-foilter field and finished with two
center Jack Ingram said. for the Buckeyes and then points.
"They won it.''
'They just outplayed us,"
Illinois ' Luther Head misIt was the second straight fired on a 3-pointer with 17 Brown said. ''They deserved
season a tealil coached by seconds left.
it."
Matta ended a run at perfecOhio State called a timeout
Foster added I0 points for
tion. Matta's Xavier team with 12 seconds left. Foster Ohio State, 'which enters this
handed Saint Joseph's its first inbounded to B.randon Fuss- .' week's Big Ten tournament
loss last season in the Cheatham who passed to · as the. No. 6 seed. After that,
Atlantic I 0 tournament.
Sylvester on the right wing, the Buckeyes will head
"I'd like to be the other in front of the Ohio State home . ..
.
team just one time,'' Matta bench. His quick shot seemed
Matta was asked if the vicsaid with a lau~h. "I'm living to surprise the lllini , nestling tory over Illinois makes his
for the day I m the No. I in the net while a capacity team's postseason ban even
team and someone else is try- crowd at Value City Arena more difficult to accept.
ing to do it to us."
.
roared.
·
·
. "Yeah. I thought we could
The last team to reach the
"The other day I was in the win the national champiNCAA tollrnament without a ~ym with Brandon and I said, onship," he joked. "And
loss was UNLV in 1991. On Wouldn 't it be unbelievable nobod(s ever going to
Saturday, Matta had shown to score 25 points and hit the know.'
his players film clips of sev• game-winner
against
The · lllini will regroup.
era! huge upsets and the Illinois.?"' Sylvester said. playing as the team to beat m
Rebels' loss to Duke in the "This feels. so good I can't the conference tournament
national semifinals that year describe it."
and then in the NCAA tourwas one of them.
After· a timeout, a pass was . nament.

Shock

from

Basketball, A3

in shootout at OK Doral .
BY DOUG fERGUSON

Associated Press
MIAMI - Tiger Woods.
turned in a performance
worthy of his return to No.

one shot the
tournament
record
at
Dora!, pre viously held
by
Jim
F u r y k
&lt;2000 l and

l.!n a dramiltic duel with
Phil Mickelson that came
a~
0 rr
down to the last ~hot
(1993). This
Sunday, Woods made a 30· Woods
is the sixth
fool birdie putt o,n the 17th
PGA Tour
hole to take the lead, then a eveJ\1 where Woods has at
6-foot par putt to dose with least a share of the 72-hole
a 6-1,mder 66 and win the record .
Ford Championship at
Vijay Singh , who had
Dora!, giving him the No. I been No. 1 the last 26
ranking for the first time weeks after beating Woods
in a Labor Day duel outside
since September.
Mickelson, coming off Boston, closed with a 66 to
doni,inant victories in 'his fini sh ihird, five shots
last two stroke-play tourna- behind, along with Zach
ments , had a chance to force Johnson (67).
Mickelson's streak of 10
a playoff or possibly win on
the 18th. His 30-foot chip consecutive rounds i(l
looked good all the way. but · stroke play atop the leaderca ught the lower lip. He board ended , but not withclosed with a 69.
"The whole day, we were out a gutsy fight. Most players would have buckled
going at each other,'' Wood s when Woods surged into the
said. " II was fun to be· a part
lead, but Mickelson came
of that .''
right back at him.
Woods took the lead for
Thi s Sunday show down
exceeded the expectations the tlrst time all .week in
of a battle between two of
ihe biggest names in golf. A spectacular fashion. From
sellout crowd was buzzing 293 yards away in the 12th
from start-to-finish, espe- fairway, he took a big crack
cially during wild momen- with hi s 3-wood, bowed hi s
tum changes on . the back head and started walking,
nine of the Blue Monster.
waiting for the cheers to tell
Woods reached the 603- him he hit the green for the
yard 12th hole for the sec- second straighf day. No oneond time in two day s for an else reached it all week.
eagle tp take a two-shot
Woods holed th'e 25-foot
lead. Mickelson "'nswered eagle putt. taking two steps
with back-to-back birdies to to the right throwing a big
catch him.
uppercut when it fell, giving
Lefty looked like he had him a two-sliot lead. It
control of the tournament · appeared the tournament
until he missed a 5-foot par suddenly was his to ·win .
· putt on the 16th, and then
Not so fast.
Lefty
Wood s delivered like he bounced back with consecuusually does with two tive birdies to. catch him ,
clutch pulls .
starling with an 8-footer on
Wood s,
who · earned the 243-yard 13th hole. But
$990,000 for his second he wasted two great
victory of the year, finished chances.
at 24-under 264 to break by
Mickelson grazed the lip

2 J

on a I0-foot birdie on the
15th, then caught the lip on
a 5-footer for par at No. 16
after Woods had. already
failed to get-and-down from
a bunker.
II was the first time in 67
holes either of them had
made a 'bogey. They performed at such a high le,vel
th at they each made . 27
birdies on the Blue Monster,
a career-high for both.
II was only the third time.
Woods and Mickelson have
played against each other in·
the final round, and Woods
impmved to 3-0. The other
two times were the 2001
Masters, where Woods had
a one-shot lead; and the
2003 Bukk Invitational ~
where Woods was two
ahead of Mickelson .
This was the first time
Lefty had the lead, and he
battled hard to keep it.
Woods managed to get
within
one
shot
Mickelson at the turn, and
their scoring was ordinary
given the superb conditions
of balmy breezes and greens
as soft as carpet.
Both had their chances . .
Woods mis sed back-toback birdie pulls from~ feet
early in the,round, but a pivotal hole came at the par-3
fourth. Mickel so n stuffed
his tee shot into 5 feet,
while Woods' tee shot
bounded off the side of the
hill and was saved by thick
rough from going into the
water.
He chipped some I 0 feet
by. and it looked as though
Mickelson would double his
lead. Instead, Woods made
a tricky par putt and
his
Mickel son mi ssed
birdie . One hole later,
Woods nicked the flag with ·
his approach and made a 4foot birdie . They matched.
shots the rest of the way;
both of them twice missing
birdie· putts inside 12 feet.

oe

.

•

.

--

.

.. •You must call prior to the end of initial 25 day period to extend.
•••Limited to one, 25 day extension. (Maximum of 50 days)
•••Classified ad limited to 15 words or less.
•••zs~ for each additional word over' ts·words.
•••Typographical corredions must be made witbin first 3 days of publication.
•••Only one Item per classified .ad.
•••Pre-payment Is Required and non-refundable.
••• Available ·only to private, noo-commen:ial individuals.

.... '479

.

Associated Fabricators, Inc. closing its doors

SPORTS

.

• Sabathia shut down.
See Page B1

.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

bu,ine"·· which has si nce
been sold to Jell Brown. who .
continue s the operati on in
another location .
A' for the bui ldin g,
Thomp,on and hi s wife.
Alice .. have no plans for 'ell ing it artd are hopeful &gt;orne
illdu stry wi ll move in . A portion of the ~tructure dates
back to the early 1900s \i'hen
the Barkcoff Organ Co.
mo ved tu · · Pomeroy and
opened a manufacturing plant
here . sh ipping organs on the
river to all parts of. the countrv.
-For most of their married
Jives. Bob and Alice lived on
the hill overlooking the
Meigs Marauder football
field adjacent to the· busine ss
building. In I CJ98 they bu ilt a
new house on a farm on Gun
Club Road. and it's there that
they will spend their retire-

HOEFLICH@JMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Associated
Fabricators. Inc. , a longtime
bu siness in Pomeroy. is closing its doors thi s week.
Contents of the construction company owned and
operated by Bob Thompson
for the past 25 years, along
·with some equipment from
t~e former Fulton-Thompson
machine shop, will be sold at
auction Satu~day.
Thompson, ~3. who is
recuperating from a stroke.
suffered in October, said he
decided it was time to retire.
have
While operations
decreased. he still has five ·
full-time and. two part-time
employees on the pay roll. ·
· Page -AS
Fifty-nine years ago,
• Virginia Harl,. 56
'
Thompson joined a relative ·
in a machine shop businessmimed Fulton-Thompson in
the same building on· Spring
Valley Lane. The company
sold
tractors and equiprrienl
· • Meigs students receive
medals at district contest. along with milking supplies
and equipment for · dairy
See Page AS
farms.
When Fulton retired from
...,.. '· '

OBITUARIES

INSIDE

~

ment years.

Charlene Hoefllch/ photo

Through
the
years
Thompson .has been involved
with the Meigs Count y Fair
Board and worked on numerous improvements ·on the

Bob Thompson and his old '1921 Fordson, which for years has sat on the vacant lot at the cor·
ner of East Main and Spring Avenue, are the same age and both are "hanging it up" come
Saturday. Thompson is clostng down his Associated Fabricators, IQc. business and the tractor
·
is being sold at auction .
the bu,iness. Thompson
remained in the building and

began changing the direction
of the business from sales to

constructi on. He further
developed the dairy servtce

Please see Closing. A5

FOUND MONEY

,.
•

We'll run your classified liue ad to sell your Boat, Camper, Motorcycle, 4- Wheeler,
Van, Pick-Up Truck, or Automobile for the low price of only $25.00.

.

............. ....

"'"' · m~dail~"·ntirll'l.&lt;·&lt;"n

TUESDA \' , MARCil M, 2005

:;o ( 1.:'\TS • \ 'ol. ;;..J. :\o. t;!&lt;J

WEATHER

We'll run your classified line ad in 25 consecutive editions of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
. the Pomeroy Sentinel and the Poi~t Pleasant Register. Your ad will reach ?ver
13,500 hom~. In addition, your ad will appear in our .weekly Tri County Marketplace
which is delivered to 17,000 homes. If you sell your vehicle within 25 days; just call
and we'll au!ctl your ad, if your vehicle didn't sell, j_uSt call prior to the end of 25 days
and we' II extend your ad another 25 days.

·

.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

•

r

Submitted photo

Authorities Latest drug arrest involves
search
Middleport pair
•

Oetallo on Page A6

INDEX

Jumper

•

"' .

Sheriff's Deputy Ricky Sm1th counts the $11,070 1n cash found along Oh10 124 at Minersville
early Sunday evening. Sheriff Robert Beegle said he believes the cash, retrieved by two deputies,
belongs to a defendant in a pending drug case, but the matter remains under investigation.

This special is only available to private, non-commercial individuals.

'499,
.......

Federal highway bill
doesn't guarantee more
gas tax for states, A2

UPWARD

•

Beth sergent/ photo

Pam Riffle (left) and Cathy Clark· are pictured operatin·g the
long-arm quilting machine owned by The Fabric Shop. The
.machine can quilt patterns in a matter pf hours resulting in
Quilts that are constructed in a few days and can withstand
wash ing machine wear-and-tear.

•

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

2 SEcnoNs- 12 PAGES

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
~ditorials

Obituaries
Sports ·

B Section

. Weather

A6

- 2005 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
:©

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.
- William Garro!!. 71,. of
Sandyville, W.Va. , has been
identified as the man who
may have jumped from the
William S. Ritchie Jr. Bridge
in Ravenswood on Friday
night.
Ravenswood Police Chief
William Sinnett . released
Garroll's name Monday.

Please see Jumper, AS

POMEROY - In local law
enforcement agencies' continued efforts to prosecute
those trafficking in drugs. a·
Middleport man and woman
were arre sted . on ·. drug
charges early Sunday when a
search of their vehicle nencd
crack cocaine and prescription medication .
Sheriff Robert Beegle said
· El'IS ha ··Lacey .. D.ICkens.
. 15
-· .
and Brandi Hicks. 20. were
arrested on Ohio 833 near

Rose Hill Road early Sunday '
morning. Dickens was arrested on a warrant of indictment
·charging four counts of drugrelated charges.
After a search of the vehi. de by the co(mty 's canine
unit resulted in the discovery
of crack cocaine and other
drug s, Dickens and Hicks
were charged with felony
possession of crack cocaine.
Charges rela\ing to their
alleged illegal possession of
prescription drugs · are abo

Please see Arrest. A5

- HI•TECH QUILTING-.
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMERO-Y - The Fabric
Shop employee Pam Riffle
traces a quilt pattern with an
infrared dot, and in four to
. five hours, she has quilted a
panern that would have taken
days if it were hand-sewn .
'The majority Of the people want it done fast." said
Riftle's fellow employee
Cathy Clark. who explained
that their quilts made with the

computerized long-arm quilt
machine are ready in a few
da ys.
Don' t let the word "computerized" fool you. There is.
skill involved in working the
long-arm quilt machine.
When
operating
the
machine. Riflle moves fluidly with the pattern. careful to
stop and snip'the thread when
it's needed and making sure
the quill is square. ·

Please. see Qulltlnc; A5

-Holzer Medical Center

Pregnant Women and Smoking Pi1ot Project

'FLAIR
T• - Sol 9to5
lion l Frtd8y H
Cloted Sundly to be

"""......,

FURNITURE

"IIIIAND NA/ol£ FtJRNJTtJRE AT DISCOOMT PRICES'

Ate 2, Gallipolis Ferry, WV (304)675-1371
' '" mllfl- of Paint Plnu'nt 01111t. lln

FREE

be jallipolislaHp lrlbutte
1 46-2342

lbc joint ~lta~ant !egi~ter
' 304:e7 1333

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